Parking and the City

Parking and the City

by Donald Shoup (Author)

Synopsis

Donald Shoup brilliantly overcame the challenge of writing about parking without being boring in his iconoclastic 800-page book The High Cost of Free Parking. Easy to read and often entertaining, the book showed that city parking policies subsidize cars, encourage sprawl, degrade urban design, prohibit walkability, damage the economy, raise housing costs, and penalize people who cannot afford or choose not to own a car. Using careful analysis and creative thinking, Shoup recommended three parking reforms: (1) remove off-street parking requirements, (2) charge the right prices for on-street parking, and (3) spend the meter revenue to improve public services on the metered streets.

Parking and the City reports on the progress that cities have made in adopting these three reforms. The successful outcomes provide convincing evidence that Shoup's policy proposals are not theoretical and idealistic but instead are practical and realistic. The good news about our decades of bad planning for parking is that the damage we have done will be far cheaper to repair than to ignore. The 51 chapters by 46 authors in Parking and the City show how reforming our misguided and wrongheaded parking policies can do a world of good.

Read more about parking benefit districts with a free download of Chapter 51 by copying the link below into your browser.

https://www.routledge.com/posts/13972

$141.78

Save:$8.96 (6%)

Quantity

5 in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 534
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 10 Apr 2018

ISBN 10: 1138497037
ISBN 13: 9781138497030

Media Reviews

For those who seek to manage and reform parking-and for urban planners, developers, transportation specialists, and policymakers-Parking and the City is an indispensable resource. -Public Square: A CNU Journal

Don Shoup has done more to revolutionize the way we think about parking than anybody on the planet. His latest book tells the story of the impact his ideas are having on the subject. It is a must read for anybody who cares about the future of our cities. -Michael Dukakis, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, Northeastern University, USA

Author Bio
Donald Shoup, FAICP, is Distinguished Research Professor of Urban Planning in the Luskin School of Public Affairs at the University of California, Los Angeles, USA.