People over parking: The U.S. cities that are reclaiming their streets
In a small but growing number of cities across the United States, parking reform is gaining momentum. How a city approaches parking could seem trivial, but it is deeply rooted in issues relating to less carbon-intensive transportation systems, encouraging green spaces and increasing access to affordable housing.
Does downtown Allentown have enough parking space? A reform group’s answer may surprise
The Parking Reform Network, a nonprofit that researches and advocates for parking policy changes, found 27% of the land in downtown Allentown is dedicated solely to parking. Whether that’s good or …
Colorado lawmakers seek ban on local parking requirements — drawing pushback as they aim to bolster housing
Colorado lawmakers are training their sights on reducing the housing crunch by eliminating minimum parking requirements in Denver and many Front Range cities and suburbs. But parking is a heated to…
New Zoning Rules Shift Cities Away from Minimum Parking Requirements
With a new zoning bylaw this year expected to reduce or eliminate minimum parking requirements in new apartment buildings, the City of Ottawa may be poised to join a growing network of communities that are connecting faster access to more affordable housing with reduced dependence on car travel.
Parking paralysis: Developers, activists, and city officials say parking requirements are blocking needed development
With concerns over a lack of affordable housing dominating headlines, communities across the country are starting to reconsider the issue of mandatory parking minimums.
Durham County has made it easier to build dense development. Here are the new rules.
Durham County joined the city this week and adopted zoning reforms that encourage denser infill development and eliminate minimum parking requirements.
The Durham County commissioners’ vote Monday night was split 3-1:
For: Chair Nida Allam, Heidi Carter, Wendy Jacobs
Against: Vice Chair Nimasheena Burns
Absent: Brenda Howerton
The vote came three weeks after the Durham City Council passed the same changes inside the city limits in its own late-night, split vote.
“I think people want small-scale, locally built housing and small-scale commercial development to be viable,” Carter said before casting her vote.