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

Denver Is Your 2017 Parking Madness Champ!

Take a moment to absorb this parking fiasco. Hard to believe it's near the middle of a major city.

This is the image that carried Denver through four rounds of competition to emerge as the champion of Streetsblog's 2017 Parking Madness tournament. In a tightly contested final that came down to a riveting back and forth on the last day of voting, Denver edged out scrappy Poughkeepsie 451-434.

For the tournament this year we focused on parking craters near transit stations to highlight how American cities are failing to support their transit infrastructure with walkable development. And Denver's monster parking crater is a classic of wasted urban potential: a huge swathe of land close to downtown, served by three light rail stations, and overwhelmed by massive parking lots for sports stadiums that barely get used much of the year.

Ken Schroeppel, a planning professor at University of Colorado Denver who blogs at Denver Urbanism, estimates that there are 50 acres of parking surrounding the Pepsi Center and another 15 acres to the immediate north and west as well. (The satellite view above is oriented so the top of the photo is facing west.)

Schroeppel has developed an infill plan for the area that would divide it into small, walkable blocks, consolidate parking into decks (cyan), and add mixed-use housing (yellow) and retail and office (blue). Existing mixed-use buildings are shown in red:

An infill development concept for Denver's championship parking crater. by Ken Schroeppel of Denver Urbanism
An infill development concept for Denver's parking crater by Ken Schroeppel of Denver Urbanism
false

Denver Planning Department spokesperson Andrea Burns said the city is hoping for redevelopment here. "A key recommendation of the 2007 Downtown Area Plan was to attract more housing, mixed use and pedestrian friendly development to this area," she said. "We are seeing downtown development of the Central Platte Valley kind of moving this direction. I think some time in the not too distant future we will see that start to change."

But in the past ten years, however, the city has not pursued redevelopment strategies or incentives for the area around these light rail stations.

Streetsblog Denver editor David Sachs says this reflects a broader problem in Denver, where car commuting to the city center is on the rise despite its significant investments in light rail.

"Denver receives a lot of nice superlatives about its transit system that shape the city's national reputation," he said. "The reality is, vacuous parking lots and car-oriented development surround a lot of the city's stations, undermining our investments in transit infrastructure.

"Hopefully some notoriety will help make the case for this part of the city to resemble more walkable areas anchored by transit, like Union Station."

We now present the 2017 Golden Crater -- don't let this moment of infamy go to waste, Denver.

golden_crater_2017

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

MTA’s Lieber Asks City to Put More Cops on Bus Lane Enforcement

Lieber told City Council members he wants more "dedicated funding for traffic enforcement to keep the [bus] lanes clear of private vehicles."

March 17, 2026

Brooklyn Residents: Keep Historic Wood Bridge For Pedestrians And Cyclists Only!

As the Department of Transportation is set to reopen the Carroll Street Bridge, locals want it to only reopen to pedestrians and cyclists.

March 17, 2026

Tuesday’s Headlines: We Love A Parade (For Pedestrians) Edition

Organizers of today's St. Patrick's Parade are telling everyone to leave their cars at home. Plus other news.

March 17, 2026

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
See all posts