Friday, January 13, 2012

Paved, but Still Alive


 TGIF!


This is Y.our E.nvironment O.f the W.eek:  Taking Parking Lots Seriously



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http://news.discovery.com/autos/tech-turns-parking-lot-hell-into-a-haven.html
 

There are said to be at least 105 million and maybe as many as 2 billion parking spaces in the United States. 
A third of them are in parking lots, those asphalt deserts that we claim to hate but that proliferate for our convenience. One study says we’ve built eight parking spots for every car in the country. Houston is said to have 30 of them per resident. In “Rethinking a Lot,” a new study of parking, due out in March, Eran Ben-Joseph, a professor of urban planning at M.I.T., points out that “in some U.S. cities, parking lots cover more than a third of the land area, becoming the single most salient landscape feature of our built environment.”
Absent hard numbers Mr. Ben-Joseph settles on a compromise of 500 million parking spaces in the country, occupying some 3,590 square miles, or an area larger than Delaware and Rhode Island combined. If the correct number is 2 billion, we’re talking about four times that: Connecticut and Vermont.
Either way it’s a lot of pavement.
As the critic Lewis Mumford wrote half a century ago, “The right to have access to every building in the city by private motorcar in an age when everyone possesses such a vehicle is the right to destroy the city.” Yet we continue to produce parking lots, in cities as well as in suburbs, in the same way we consume all those billions of plastic bottles of water and disposable diapers.
What to do? Check on the link to read the rest:  Paved, but still Alive
--MICHAEL KIMMELMAN
 

See slideshow here: Parking





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