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Quinn’s Parking Agenda Gives Nothing to the 54 Percent Who Don’t Own Cars
On Monday we published the revised schedule for this week's City Council hearing in James Vacca's transportation committee. Out with oversight of the MTA budget and its consequences for straphangers, in with bills to make parking more convenient. Maybe we were being a little unfair with that post, because the person who ultimately sets the agenda for the City Council isn't Vacca, but Speaker Christine Quinn.
January 19, 2012
City Tests Out Parking Sensors, But So Far Just For Space-Finding App
New York City took a significant step today toward modernizing the way it allocates scarce curbside parking spaces, but it remains to be seen whether the city will embrace the full potential its new parking tech.
January 18, 2012
Another Year, Another David Greenfield Parking Bill
The City Council is again looking to placate scofflaw drivers. This time, Council Member David Greenfield of Brooklyn wants to limit cases in which the city can tow vehicles belonging to drivers who have racked up hundreds of dollars in unpaid parking fines. DNAinfo has the story:
January 12, 2012
Times Architecture Critic Calls For Eliminating NYC Parking Minimums
The fight to eliminate parking minimums in New York City just went mainstream.
January 6, 2012
How to Make Your Own Free Parking Near the Atlantic Yards Site
Via Norman Oder at Atlantic Yards Report, here's a variety of parking scofflaw that we've never come across before on Streetsblog.
January 6, 2012
DCP Advances Promising Manhattan Parking Reforms, Fixes Flawed Study
When plans to reform parking policies in the Manhattan core leaked out of the Department of City Planning last fall, the documents presented a riddle. The proposed changes were solid reforms to successful policies, closing loopholes in the existing parking caps and rationalizing the current system. The draft study which accompanied the reforms, however, seemed to play fast and loose with the facts while arguing for the city to allow parking to eat up more of Manhattan's valuable space. One hand didn't seem to know what the other was doing, and with New York's powerful real estate industry lobbying against the parking maximums, parking reform was in a precarious position.
January 3, 2012
SFPark Manager: Too Early to Evaluate Groundbreaking Parking Program
It's too soon in the development of SFPark to draw any conclusions about the effectiveness of demand-responsive pricing on parking habits, says the SFMTA's Jay Primus, who manages the SFPark program.
December 16, 2011
A Day in the Life of a Pop-Up Café
Take a break this weekend from the unrelentingly bleak news about Governor Cuomo's stealth attack on the transit system, and enjoy this time-lapse of the new pop-up café at Local on Sullivan Street. Up until this July, a camera at this location would only have recorded the occasional act of parallel parking and feeding the meter.
December 9, 2011
Will City Planning Commission Uphold Parking Maximums at St. Vincent’s?
The sides are lining up for and against the oversized parking garage that the Rudin family wants to build for its luxury apartments at the former St. Vincent's Hospital site in Greenwich Village. Supporting the request to exceed Manhattan's parking maximums is Borough President Scott Stringer. Opposing it are the community board and the urban planning advocates at the Municipal Art Society. Next month, the City Planning Commission will decide whether to ignore its own guidelines and grant a special permit raising the maximums for the Rudins.
December 6, 2011
Eyes on the Street: At Knickerbocker Ave. Station, No Such Thing as TOD
This isn't what transit-oriented development is supposed to look like.
November 29, 2011