Thursday, June 13, 2013

Some Interesting Parking Stories....

Creepy crawlies ruin bridge killing 13 people http://goo.gl/1Hdjy

Parking by Gender? Mayor in Germany Stirs Up Controversy on Extreme Parking http;//ow.ly/lJNAV

DC's BikeStation -- Extreme Parking series on @travelchannel http://ow.ly/lKfVs

90 Central Parking Deck renovation earns award http://ow.ly/lSoXU

Awesome bike parking system sucks your ride into the depths of the earth http://goo.gl/vDSul

Poor design has led to a mobility parking space being made unusable  http://goo.gl/jPTt4

Access to Christchurch Hospital difficult could turn into a "quagmire" if Hagely Park Cricket oval goes ahead http://goo.gl/ZMnWx

Lack of parking a 'major problem' at Papakura Train Station  http://goo.gl/rk1WC

Council Candidate Calls for Fairer Parking in Central Wellington http://goo.gl/wE9k3

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Self Driving Cars Will Double Traffic.

Self Driving Cars will double the worlds CBD traffic.  These cars will be 'sent home' or to an 'out of city' parking lot meaning they will need to make 4 trips to town and back each day and not the common two we do now.



Audi Piloted Parking

For the full story read it here

Friday, June 7, 2013

TDM Will Double Traffic Congestion in the Future

TDM will double the traffic into town in the future…. That’s not the affect its supposed to have?

Most of my ‘parking’ working life has been primarily about trying to optimise the parking operation by getting as many people into a well run and attractive facility, as possible.  The single aim has been to achieve a high occupancy with the tipping point of too many customers demanding spaces because the facility’s promotion and operations are too successful.  Then I can put the prices up and start all over again.

Transport Demand Management just passes on poor Road Corridor Management to Parking

Imagine how surprised I was when I started to work in a city environment, not just about parking operations anymore, but being surrounded by Traffic Engineers and Transport Planners who spoke about using parking as a transport demand management tool.  To the lay person, this means artificially fiddling with the price at a facility to discourage customers, to consequently force them to take the bus, train, bicycle or suffer the fake prices.

In Wikipedia, Transportation demand management, traffic demand management or travel demand management (all TDM) is the application of strategies and policies to reduce travel demand (specifically that of single-occupancy private vehicles), or to redistribute this demand in space or in time.  I get this.  I really do.  This should be about encouraging a different method of travel through enticements, attractiveness of the product and lifestyle or even competing values, not about hitting people over the head with the blunt mallet of price for parking.

This is an issue that should be solved in other areas, such as road corridor operations or in public transport operations, not parking operations.  It feels very much like the upstream road corridor, PT design and traffic operations have not been done well and the result is to pass it on to parking operations to clean up!  I suggest the answer is sharpening up the up-stream issues first and solving the problems there, rather than have it passed onto someone, somewhere else to resolve.  This is designing a system to run inefficiently on purpose!

The benefits of having a city parking operation that runs efficiently are to have facilities run for the benefit of the customer, the equipment and facility’s capital (tax dollars) are spent well and not wasted and run inefficiently, technology is then allowed to deliver a service that is tailored to the needs of the remaining customers and competition will produce a better service to the city.  The cons of having an inefficiently run parking operation are plain to see, poor service, spiralling costs and a black hole where increasing amounts of money disappears into and the whole is worth less.


Self Drive cars will double the Traffic Congestion

In the coming modern world, the time, distance and place (TDP) road pricing methodology, where road users are charged based on when, where and how much they drive is a better way of controlling the travel demand.  Why?  Because the BMW’s and the Audi’s of the word are quickly moving to a system of auto-drive vehicles that can drive into town, drop the passenger off at work and then drive out to a fringe parking lot or back home again, not using the inner city car park with its artificially inflated prices.  These new vehicles will make four trips into and out of the city each day, in effect doubling the traffic in the city from what we have now.  This is not the affect TDM is supposed to have. 

Congestion charging or tolls on roads will be better suited to solving the travel demand issues, not parking.


Kevin Warwood
Parking Operations Designer




These views are my own.