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Originally Posted by iheartthed
I disagree here. They need more people living near there and less parking spots. There is a sea of surface parking spaces to the east of the Ren Cen that sits empty nearly 100% of the time.
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Post-covid this is true, but when GM had the peak number of employees at the Ren Cen, those parking lots were full during business hours. Assuming any future office tenants would have a peak number of employees (remote-work notwithstanding), this means the Ren Cen will need all those parking spaces.
Even with residential conversion, I think the parking minimum is something like 2 spaces for every unit (or it might be by square footage). Either way, parking will be needed.
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A perverse philosophy developed in Detroit in the mid-20th century that the way to save downtown was to flood it with parking spaces to compete with the ease of parking at malls in the suburbs. This was always an extremely flawed strategy because downtown could never be a convenient location to travel to by car. Even for much of the city's population, it is easier to drive to malls in the suburbs than it is to drive to downtown Detroit. The only way to counteract that convenience factor for downtown is to get more people to live close to downtown.
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Without comprehensive mass transit, Detroit will be limited to car-dependent development. No matter how many people actually live and work downtown, any new development of scale will require parking. For a variety of reasons, people will not necessarily live next door or within walking distance to where they work even if both areas are within downtown/midtown or adjacent neighborhoods and personal cars are still the fastest and easiest way to travel until there's more of a streetcar network that could move hundreds of people at a time.