not sure where this fits so will stick it here....
Parking being squeezed out in Vancouver
FRANCES BULA
VANCOUVER— Special to Globe and Mail Update
Published Monday, Jan. 30, 2012 5:09PM EST
At Graham McGarva’s architecture firm, only five of the 20 employees commute to work by car. And that’s a high ratio compared with other workplaces nearby.
So he knew already that office parking downtown was becoming less of an essential item.
But the point was really driven home when his firm, VIA Architecture, went to work on a new office tower that will face the city’s former train station, now its top transportation hub for commuter rail and buses.
The owner of the site, at 320 Granville, is tearing down a 50-year-old parking garage that is becoming less profitable every year. And, in the new 32-storey office tower that will be built in its place and likely house as many as 1,800 people, Mr. McGarva is including only 133 parking spots – less than half of what would have been required two decades ago and a quarter of the norm in the 1960s.
He’s not the only one – other office builders in Vancouver are doing the same. “We’re all seeing different aspects of that trend,” Mr. McGarva says.
“In the old days,” says Vancouver’s planning director, Brent Toderian, “they would have had to not only build the parking required for the new construction” – about 300 stalls – “but you would have had to replace the parking of the old garage.” In this case, the parkade that will be torn down has about 500 spaces.
Vancouver’s 1997 transportation plan capped downtown parking and banned new roads. Since then, the number of car trips and parking spots has gradually declined, even while the number of jobs and overall trips in the central city have increased.
Back then, the parking standard was one stall for every 1,000 to 1,500 square feet. Today the figure is far less – and negotiable for every building. That’s in spite of the fact that today’s buildings hold twice as many people in these open-plan, cost-cutting times.
Last year marked a big change in parking behaviour as commuters responded to a new 35-per-cent tax on parking stalls in commercial lots, higher on-street parking costs, and the new Richmond-to-Vancouver rapid-transit line built for the Olympics that has proven to be a huge hit with the downtown crowd.
Parking revenue collected at city-owned garages dropped by 9 per cent, while funds from on-street parking, traditionally an ever-increasing moneymaker, did not rise as much as the city’s finance department had been counting on.
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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on...queezed-out-in-vancouver/article2319946/