Los Angeles Requires Too Many Parking Spaces
Tuesday April 22nd 2008, 2:13 pm
Filed under: Los Angeles, Urban Planning

On occasion of it being Earth Day, I thought a post on urban planning was in order, specifically regarding policies in Los Angeles (one of the least sustainable cities I know). I’ve never understood why L.A. can’t accommodate both the car and build mass transit. It isn’t either/or, as most Angelinos like to believe. Some people want to drive, others prefer to take transit (providing it is reliable, safe, and clean). Why limit choice by forcing people to drive?

But here’s what most people in L.A. don’t understand: current L.A. parking regulations don’t reflect reality, even in L.A. New market condos require 2.25 parking spaces per unit (or, in some cases, 2.5 spaces or even 2.75 spaces in special districts), regardless of the size of the unit. That literally means that they expect every single household to have 2 cars and every other household to have someone over for dinner every other night (0.25 guest spaces). Since this doesn’t reflect reality, what we get are fewer housing units and a lot of expensive empty parking spaces in new buildings.

In most cases, parking requirements in L.A. — not density — is what limits how many units of housing can be built. You simply cannot park the required number of cars on the site, so you build fewer units than is allowed. In many cases, you can only build about 75% of the number of units allowed by zoning. We are literally choosing to house cars over people, because the more cars you house, the less housing units you get. What’s worse: because it costs so much money and space to build the required parking (and because they can’t get the number of units allowed on the site), developers are forced to build bigger units, which means there are few small (and thus more affordable) market-rate units available. That L.A. hasn’t met its housing demand in over a decade is one symptom of the problem (even now, with prices falling due to the mortgage meltdown, there still is more demand than supply).

But here’s the rub: if you look at the number of cars vs. the number of housing units in L.A., you find that on average, there are about 1.4 cars per unit (which is to say that about half of households have 1 car and half have 2 cars, and a few even have none!). Adding 0.25 guest spaces per unit and the actual number of spaces required per unit in L.A. is 1.65. Now, let’s be clear: 1.65 spaces per unit is a very high number. In New York City, by comparison, there are 1.7 million registered vehicles for 3.4 million housing units — a ratio of 0.50 per unit — 3.3 times fewer than the 1.65 required in L.A. So, indeed, L.A. is a driving city. But we need only 1.65, not 2.25.

Think about it, we could reduce the parking standard by over 25% — from 2.25 to 1.65 parking spaces per unit and still accommodate all the cars required in L.A.; this would allow us to build over 25% more housing units without even changing the density (since in many cases, as I said above, you can only build about 75% of the allowable units).

Now imagine if we required all projects throughout the city (over a certain size, let’s say 10+ units) to set aside 10% of the units as affordable. It’s a win-win for everyone. We accommodate cars at the ratio required for L.A. (1.65 spaces per unit), developers get over 15% more market units and we institute a mechanism to generate 10% affordable units for every new project in the city. All it takes is leadership.


4 Comments/commentaires
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Great post man. Thanks for reading MetroRiderLA.

Comment/commentaire by Fred Camino 04.22.08 @ 3:03 pm

I’m pleased to see the logic in the article is sensitive to the changing population needs. The dynamics of urban planning are such that no one formula works across the board for the country, or even inside one state. The best city planners can do is to develop policies that represent the demographics of local government and be consistent in their application. What I mean is that the complexities of urban living depend on population distribution, the type of economy, worker wages, housing prices and even educational institutions. A city that aligns itself with mass transit development can choose to reduce parking requirements if alternatives are available. One of the reasons for the decline of cities in the urban northeastin the mid to late 20th century had to do more with choices than necessity. Most people lived in central cities and didn’t have automobiles. As people bought automobiles and moved to the outskirts of town a greater percentage of the population relied on the automobile. The reduction of parking requirements is all very well if in fact the residents stop driving and use public transit. In Los Angeles the cost to drive and the journey to work has become almost as inconvenient as transit. I see this to be an opportunity. We should have policies that simply do not reduce parking requirements without increasing transit. Let’s say a developer can reduce the cost of a project by reducing parking by let’s say a million dollars. Right now we take their word and agree maybe that we are overplanning for parking. Our policies let the devloper walk away with a million dollars in his pocket. Cities still have to provide municipal services for the extra people.Firemen, policemen, refuse pick-up etc. all cost money. There should be consideration to use that million dollars in the devloper’s pocket to improve our infrastructure and develop mass transit. The BART system in the Bay area is having a profound effect on the area in the past 30 years. We need to think about the big picture and not be so quick and accomodating when a land baron cries into the Mayor and city council’s handkerchief. Let’s not be willing so sell the next generation out with knee-jerk planning.

Comment/commentaire by Don Norte 04.22.08 @ 6:19 pm

Don — perhaps you missed the point. We can reduce parking from 2.25 to 1.65 and accommodate all the cars we need. It’s simply bringing our requirements in line with the reality of L.A.

That said, of course we should make investments in transit.

But your characterization of development in L.A. doesn’t reflect reality. Developers aren’t pocketing a million dollars by reducing parking requirements, especially, as I recommended, we have a 10% affordability requirement.

Comment/commentaire by democraticspace 04.22.08 @ 10:07 pm

Despite the affordability requirement the “reality” of planning on the Westside is to give density bonuses for affordable units, then towards the end of construction the developer goes bankrupt. Someone else comes along and buys the property, but they say they can’t make the project feasible unless the units are market rate.
We wind up with more units than would be allowed and less parking than required, even without the density bonus. I work with cities all through the state, so I’m not saying parking reductions are a bad thing, but we need more teeth when we place conditions on developers, like fines, transit mitigation funds, etc. rather than look the other way when promises go sour. If we want to be leaders and set forth policies we need to stand our ground and not throw our hands up. If developers paid transit mitigation fees BEFORE or during construction we would have more control.
Thanks for the dialogue. It’s important that you know I support your concept, but as past president of the California Public Parking Association I have seen a lot of abuse and hope you can appreciate my perspective is part of the ugly reality nobody likes to fess up to.

Comment/commentaire by Don Norte 04.23.08 @ 8:51 am



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