Showing posts with label parking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parking. Show all posts

Saturday, April 3, 2021

ON THIS DAY OF RENEWAL

WE RENEW OUR PLEA TO STOP SCOFFLAWS FROM USING ACCESSIBLE PARKING SPACES THAT THEY DO NOT NEED OR DESERVE

Half the vehicles parked in accessible spaces in South Florida don’t belong there.

Young people “borrow” placards of dead relatives to get a prime space.

Selfish able-bodied jackasses use placards of legitimately disabled family members (who are not present to make use of the blue and white placard legal) to avoid paying for parking.

This denies access to people with disabilities who need safe, van-width parking.

May karma deal swiftly with them.

Quoth the Raven: Nevermore.



Sunday, August 9, 2020

BRIAN O’LOONEY’S INCREMENTS OF NEIGHBORHOOD

A COMPENDIUM OF BUILT TYPES FOR WALKABLE AND VIBRANT COMMUNITIES 
This fresh book shares the secret sauce for building efficient, sustainable and viable cites.

Think of this as a cookbook for urban design. 

You can flip to the section that shares facts, solutions and images of what you want to prepare that day. 

Just like the dessert baker doesn’t have to read all the meatloaf recipes, the architect tackling missing middle issues doesn’t have to read every chapter on parking, high rises or suburbia. 

O’Looney’s “recipes” share images of plans, at-grade photos, aerial images, under construction shots, views from different angles – providing an easy path from raw idea to appetizing built environment. 

Architecture impacts every one of us because it impacts every aspect of our daily lives.

A veteran architect shares his passion – in words and images – for the architecture of democracy and inclusion. 

If you’ve ever listened to an architect or planner explaining a building type or neighborhood style – but couldn’t picture exactly what they were talking about – this is your book.

Thousands of clear images plain English details provide an everyman’s guide to the complex world of placemaking.

https://www.amazon.com/Increments-Neighborhood-Compendium-Walkable-Communities/dp/1940743869/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=o%27looney&qid=1595530908&sr=8-1

Monday, September 7, 2015

AN URBAN PLANNER HAS DONE HIS JOB

WHEN A CITY APPROVES HIS CONCEPT

PlusUrbia Design championed relaxed parking for Little Havana and other core areas of Miami where small infill development was stalled because of existing Miami 21 structured parking requirements.

CURBED.com wrote about our concept being adopted by a City Board:
http://miami.curbed.com/archives/2015/07/30/it-may-finally-be-feasible-to-build-small-infill-buildings-in-miami.php

This is the editorial, published more than half a year ago, where PlusUrbia's Juan Mullerat made a case for waiving parking for infill development on small, infill lots.




The average American uses 900 square feet for parking each day. The average apartment is 982 square feet. That means North Americans use almost as much room for cars as for homes. Miami’s gluttonous parking habit, and the way the city’s zoning code deals with this problem, discourages small-scale development that could greatly improve its many neighborhoods.

Miami21, the city’s zoning code, regulates development with sequential intensities assigned to zones. Simply put: The less intense the zone, the smaller the development allowed — Zone 3 allows only single family houses, while Zone 6 is assigned to areas such as Downtown and Brickell. Miami21 allocates all the ingredients for development: density, open space, building size, street frontage and green space sequentially depending on its zone. But it does not do this with parking.

Parking requirements are determined by building uses, not by a zone’s density/intensity. That means that generally, a five-bedroom home in Morningside (Zone 3) has the same parking requirements (1.5 spaces) as a studio apartment in Brickell (Zone 6). However, the Morningside mansion can typically accommodate six cars in driveways and garages, while the Brickell studio may use only one or none.
While Miami21 encourages urban infill redevelopment, we currently see few small-scale buildings that long defined the city. Few neighborhood-scaled mid- and low-rise projects are being developed, largely because of their parking demands. Intense super-block developments dominate the real-estate market because they can exploit their super size to cover their parking structures’ building costs.
Miami’s code rewards these behemoths by applying a use-based sharing ratio that exponentially reduces required parking as the building gets larger.

Additionally, a required driveway consumes about 25 percent of a small parcel’s frontage. On a superblock, it may be less than 1 percent. This difference alone can kill a small-scale project. Small property owners will often wait to be bought out by developers assembling land for mega developments, as it is rarely feasible to develop small buildings because of their parking requirements.

The result is dozens of neighborhoods blighted with vacant lots and dilapidated small buildings. There is no incentive for small-scale development, which arguably weathers real estate’s cyclical booms and busts better than mega developments that crash to a halt when the economy slows.
Cities are living, breathing organisms made up of distinctly unique neighborhoods. They cannot survive on a diet of superblocks.

To promote the healthy evolution of diverse places, the Miami21 code requires constant attention. Surgical amendments to the code address local conditions and enable growth addressing land use, open space, accessibility and infrastructure conscious of its context.

Wynwood, for example, a warehouse district undergoing significant change, has required district-specific code modifications to facilitate its transformation into an arts hub. Every district and neighborhood requires different calibration to remain unique. The code needs to be adjusted to address the different nuances and shifting market trends of each area. Zoning must be an enabler, not a hindrance to the evolution of a city.

Miami21 establishes a strong framework code for the city of Miami to guide growth. But its parking requirements must be revisited to build human-scaled developments on thousands of vacant lots that should be brought to life with housing, jobs, services and activity.
Miami’s parking blues can be fixed by applying several methods at the city’s disposal, including better public transportation and especially the expansion of the fee-in-lieu program that allows developers to pay into a parking fund.

That system, already used in parts of the city, builds garages that serve multiple developments — in lieu of the burden of creating onsite parking. Miami needs to revisit, with precision, ways to encourage development opportunities for these small urban parcels.

The first major fix should be to base parking requirements and sharing ratio reductions by both land use and its increasing density and intensity (from the suburban Zone 3 up to the Brickell skyscraper Zone 6) allowed in the Miami21 code.

Juan Mullerat, an urban designer with two decades of international experience, is principal at PlusUrbia Design in Coconut Grove.

Monday, June 1, 2015

ASK A GIMP GIRL!



TRUTH FROM THE EARTHBOUND TOMBOY

 

BY HEIDI JOHNSON-WRIGHT

I get oodles of inquiries here at the EarthBound TomBoy and in the everyday world, asking me questions about gimp life. Many of my gimp friends get similar questions. So, it seems we gimps have an opportunity -- nay, a responsibility -- to educate you curious souls who want real insight into how we roll. So, I'm going to run a feature from time to time called "Ask a Gimp Girl!" And away we go...

Q. Aren't you really in it for the parking?

A. Wow, your insight has laser-like accuracy! Incredible! Now that I've been found out, here's the scoop. I was a precocious kid. Many years before I learned to drive, I knew close-in parking was the key to happiness and success in life. So back in the summer of 1972, I had my parents send me away to a medical experimentation laboratory. (We told everyone I was at church camp.) The chief doctor -- who bore a striking resemblance to Marty Feldman -- re-programmed my genetic material to ensure I would contract an autoimmune disease. And, golly gee wilikers, if I didn't come down with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis a year later, and a particularly wicked case at that. The disease ravaged my joints from head to toe leaving behind catastrophic permanent damage. I was using a wheelchair in no time!

Flash forward to my thirties when I bought my first wheelchair-lift van. That's when my "get crippled to get parking" scheme really paid off. I would drive to fun destinations on a whim (i.e., supermarket, doctor, my workplace) and search for accessible parking (called "handicapped parking" by you outsiders). I made sure to have lots of music cassettes with me, so I could listen to my favorite tunes as I circled and circled, scouting for a parking space unoccupied by weekend athletes who'd borrowed their Great-Aunt Tessie's placard.

I recall one particular reconnaissance run when I explained to a motorist that he'd inadvertently parked in the access aisle between two spaces -- the area I needed to deploy my ramp and exit the van. He screamed and called me a word I first heard on my grandpa's Redd Foxx comedy album. That's the day I knew I'd finally arrived into the upper echelon of the parking elite.

Q. Can you have children?

A. So glad you asked. Honestly, there are few things I'd rather do than talk to a complete stranger about the parts of my life that the US Supreme Court says are protected by the First Amendment penumbra of privacy. Why? Because like all gimps, my duty to educate the general public on what it's like to be one of "them people in a wheelchair" trumps all of my personal feelings and needs as a human being.

Now, on to the question. Before I can answer it, however, I have to consult my gimp question de-coder ring. (I got it in a box of Peanut Butter Captain Crunch back in 1976 and it hasn't failed me yet.) Okay, I'll give the ring a spin...Hey, wait just one darn minute! "Can I have children?" is not really the question at all! What you're really asking me is "Can I carry out the act that has been the traditional way of conceiving children?!" Ah, you're a sly one, Mr. Question Asker, that you are.

Okay, I get it. Gimps are not exactly held up as society's ideal of sexual attractiveness -- Push Girls and the occasional fashion model aside. Most of us are pretty much sidelined as benchwarmers in the Big Game of Slap and Tickle. At least that's how you outsiders see it.

Let's see...how can I put this politely? How can I satisfy your longing for knowledge without compromising the gentility of the EBTB blog? Okay, here goes...

If I "can't have children," -- as you put it, Mr. Question Asker -- then I sure have wasted a king's ransom on contraceptives over the years.

http://earthboundtomboy.blogspot.com/2015/05/ask-gimp-girl.html