The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Roswell mulls downtown parking fixes

Consulting firm offers two-pronged strategy as option.

- By Adrianne Murchison adrianne.murchison@ajc.com

A consultant shared a plan Monday to potentiall­y alleviate downtown Roswell parking woes.

Joel Mann, of the engineerin­g consulting firm Stantec, advised City Council during a Monday meeting. The firm was hired through the Downtown Developmen­t Authority and conducted a parking study of the Canton Street area from Woodstock Street to Hill Street at City Hall.

Frequent visitors to the historic Canton Street district who were asked about the ease of finding available parking said they regularly circle city blocks hunting for spaces.

Only 30% of downtown Roswell’s 3,000 parking spaces are public parking, a study shows. The other 70% are lots privately owned by businesses and leased to the city for part-time public use.

Downtown business owners, from offices to restaurant­s and retail establish- ments, as well as residents and visitors, weighed in on the study.

“For somebody not famil- iar here, (parking) can be kind of challengin­g,” Mann said. “You can see where there can be some perception of not enough parking, or parking’s not easy or intuitive.”

The transporta­tion planner said only 57% of down- town parking is regularly used by visitors because most are unaware of where parking is located or don’t have a desire to walk from, say, City Hall over to the heart of Canton Street at Magnolia.

Sally Johnson, former owner of The Chandlery gift shop on Canton, lives in the district and says visitors to downtown Roswell often park on her residen- tial street.

“Roswell has been trying to fix the parking problem for 20 years,” she told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

An inventory of parking lots and spaces showed there are 120 parking lots of all sizes scattered throughout downtown Roswell charging various prices and open at different times, Mann said.

Mann offered a twopronged strategy to improve parking. Instead of building a parking garage with 500 spaces, he suggests working with businesses that have underutili­zed lots to add 50 public parking spaces per year over the next decade.

Mann said a gradual approach to adding parking space is more beneficial than building a garage where spaces would likely only be filled during peak hours.

He also advised officials to create a master plan for downtown developers that includes a parking strategy and attempts to predict mar- ket changes.

Mayor Lori Henry said Stantec’s study is a good starting point but only the first of more conversati­ons on the issue.

Councilman Mike Palermo told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on that he wants to move forward in fixing down- town Roswell’s parking problems.

“My issue is too often a study is provided and the city doesn’t do anything with it,” Palermo said. “My hope is we take it seriously and take things in the right direction.”

 ?? BEN BRASCH/AJC FILE ?? Frequent visitors to historic downtown Roswell say they often circle city blocks seeking spaces.
BEN BRASCH/AJC FILE Frequent visitors to historic downtown Roswell say they often circle city blocks seeking spaces.

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