Quote:
Originally Posted by The ATX
The CBD portion of it mostly sucks at street level.
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Restaurants like this are the answer, to be honest. Also... said this elsewhere, but it should be repeated until nauseous: in ALL of the parking spaces on Congress put those wooden elevated pocket patios. It'd created a tremendous sense of place.
http://designweekaustin.com/blog/the...sign-in-austin
Generally, this is probably better for traffic in areas with high enough foot traffic density to support retail regardless of the parking out front, because people bother to look for parking spaces (thereby slowing the pace of traffic). So... on major thoroughfares in downtown (or adjacent), it might be prudent to begin to expropriate this idea in a more permanent fashion, with varying styles for varying corridors.
However, we'd need business buy-in.
A good way to get business buy-in is to for the city to partner with local tech companies to create a smart phone AND web app that allows users to find the closest available on-street parking spots and parking garages and their prices by integrating smart tech into the actual physical infrastructure, such as weight sensors in the parking spaces and infrared cameras that sense car heat (at least in the public spaces) to feed real time information into the app about availability, and definitely integrate Google map directions into it. Call the damn app something short, pithy, and catchy to do with Austin's culture and then plaster the name and the app logo EVERYWHERE downtown on street signage displayed prominently with simple instructions. This would be an incredibly useful enterprise and actually pretty cost effective if done solely within the city core, regardless of the parklets.
How do you get the major tech companies to partner with you? Easy: It'd allow them to develop this as a pilot project, and then expand the idea elsewhere as a huge money-maker for them in city contracts. The idea is a fucking no brainer and I can't believe it hasn't been done before or talked about.
https://www.parkme.com/austin-parking
This gets at the idea, but a significant part of the idea is that the city act in an official capacity to encourage the use of a single platform that is displayed prominently downtown so that everyone can locate available parking near where they're going, without having to necessarily park directly in front of the building (thus slowing traffic).
In other words, this could eat away both at traffic and help to create a sense of place because we could replace many parking spaces with parklets.