parking

Mixed messages

Can I park my bike here or not?

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Flickr icon for roland
Submitted by roland on Fri 2011-02-04 00:26 #

no you can't, j*rks!

Flickr icon for roland
Submitted by roland on Fri 2011-02-04 00:26 #

oh i forgot the obligatory "bicycle parking is not a crime" :P

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New Westminster Downtown Parkade

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Flickr icon for sillygwailo
Submitted by sillygwailo on Sat 2009-07-18 01:57 #

Tenth to the Fraser uses this photo to adorn a blog post about 10 noteworthy places in New Westminster.

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Think About Parking Here

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Flickr icon for vasta
Submitted by vasta on Wed 2008-02-06 08:13 #

I'll think about it, but I'm not sure I'll do it.

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Aparkalypse Now II, a graphic novel opposing the Don Fisher Parking Initiative in San Francisco
Vancouver gets mentioned twice as a paragon of downtown urban planning.
"6 bicycles versus one car"
"This bike park occupies a single carpark space, like a critical proposal to the traffic"

Sprawl Is a Regional Attribute

Michael Manville and Donald Shoup [PDF]: “Without doubt, the cities of New York and San Francisco are denser than the city of LA. But sprawl is a regional attribute, and Los Angeles has much denser suburbs than New York or San Francisco. Indeed, the LA region's distinguishing characteristic may be the uniformity of its density; its suburbs have 82 percent of the density of its central city. In contrast, New York's suburban density is a mere 12 percent of its central city density, and San Francisco's suburban density is only 35 percent of the city's. New York and San Francisco look like Hong Kong surrounded by Phoenix, while Los Angeles looks like Los Angeles surrounded by . . . well, Los Angeles.”

Los Angeles has (as evidently does Calgary) a reputation of being a "victim of urban sprawl", though the California city is in fact very dense, but just dense on a wide scale. Manville and Shoup then argue that Los Angeles' parking policies—that is, that the city requires a minimum amount of parking in a development—and the cost of land in a central business district (CBD) are an inhibiting factor in creating the vibrant street-life in the downtown core of the city. Unlike San Francisco or New York, the authors argue, there is little incentive to explore the shops and hangouts downtown because parking is so near to the event they just participated in or attended. They are careful to note that a sane parking policy will not lead to a vibrant CBD during the evening, but that an insane policy will prevent the existence of such vibrancy.