Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In

Streetsblog readers have whittled a field of 16 parking craters next to transit stations down to the Final Four in Parking Madness 2017.

The winner of today's match will go up against whoever emerges from the contest between Medford and Poughkeepsie, which are still duking it out (you can vote until 2 p.m. Thursday).

This semi-final pits central areas in two major American cities against each other. Only one will have a shot at everlasting shame in the championship match.

Atlanta -- Luckie Street and Centennial Olympic Park Drive

atlanta_crater

Reader Michelle Rushing sent us this view of the parking around three Atlanta streetcar stops (the purple stars). Surface parking is outlined in orange, and parking garages are outlined in blue. This entry beat craters in San Bernardino and Little Rock in earlier rounds of competition.

Not surprisingly, a short, mixed-traffic streetcar winding between so many parking lots is not getting much use. The line only attracts about 700 riders a day.

Rushing says of this site:

There is a park on one side but the surrounding blocks are parking and more parking, punctuated by an occasional restaurant or hotel. In the 2+ years since the streetcar was completed, the only development has been to add solar panels to the parking lot next to the stop.

Denver -- Pepsi Center/Mile High Stadium/West Auraria

denver_craters

There are three light rail stops within this Denver parking crater, which beat out a BART station and a suburban St. Louis light rail stop to reach the Final Four. Parking for an amusement park, the Pepsi Center (where the Nuggets play) and Mile High Stadium (where the Broncos play, below the frame), swamps this part of the Auraria neighborhood near Metropolitan State University of Denver.

Reader Jerry Goudin, an alum MSU of Denver, provides some background on how Auraria got to be this way:

In 1965, the S. Platte River, which can be seen in the lower left corner of the image, overran its banks and large portions of areas near the river flooded including the rail yards. The rail yards ran next to the river for much of its length in downtown Denver. The area in the upper right portion of the image was the neighborhood of Auraria and is now the Auraria campus. For the most part, Auraria was spared from the flood but the city of Denver used the flood as a pretext to consolidate three growing academic institutions in one place and, by doing so, wipe out much of the Auraria neighborhood. Here is a [photo] that shows the Auraria neighborhood before the establishment of the campus.

Photo via Denver Infill
Photo via Denver Infill
false

Cast your vote to determine which of these asphalt oceans will contend for the Golden Crater in the Parking Madness final.

parking_madness_2017

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Mamdani Uses ‘Sammy’s Law’ To Reduce Speed Limits To 15 MPH At Schools, But Broader Implementation Is Stalled

By the end of this year, 800 more streets in front of public school buildings will get 15-mile-per-hour speed limits, bringing the citywide total to 1,300. It's a start.

Amazon Owes Nearly $10M Unpaid Fines for Idling in New York City

The online retail giant owes more than any other other company issued fines through the city's Citizens Air Complaint Program.

March 16, 2026

Mamdani Administration Wants To Allow A Brooklyn Hospital To Issue Parking Tickets

Could parking tickets be written by someone other than NYPD traffic agents and cops? Time will tell if this is a good idea or not.

March 16, 2026

Bus Companies Say There’s a Better Way to Take a ‘Great American Road Trip’ This Summer

As Americans start planning their summer vacations, the country’s largest inter-city bus operator is challenging them to leave their cars at home.

March 16, 2026

Monday’s Headlines: Beware of ‘Fraud’ Fraud Edition

The governor keeps pushing her Uber-backed car insurance plan. And we keep pushing back. Plus other news.

March 16, 2026

Hired Actors, Paid Media: Big Tech Has Already Dumped $8M Into Hochul’s Car Insurance Ploy

Buckets of cash and ads with professional actors are boosting Uber and Hochul's cause.

March 13, 2026
See all posts