How Parking is Ruining American Cities [Documentary]

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Жыл бұрын

Parking doesn't add much value to a city, especially when there's too much...
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Пікірлер: 160
@matthewboyd8689
@matthewboyd8689 Жыл бұрын
Save $350 a month by not having parking Save another $300 a month by not having to pay for maintenance, fuel, insurance, and car loans Old people are so addicted to cars they refuse to understand any transport that isn't a vehicle
@Mark-uh3un
@Mark-uh3un Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy that in the nation obsessed with capitalism and ROI so much space is taken by the least economically viable structures like surface level parking lots. That space could have been used for a business or manufacturing facility that bring much more income to the city.
@dumyjobby
@dumyjobby Жыл бұрын
That's because when they built cities cars were the new cool thing and everything was designed around them, European cities had the luck of being old and built in a time where there was no public or personal transportation so everyone had to walk everywhere, that why those cities are compact and everything you need is close. But even in Europe lots of cities after WW2 were bombed to the ground and they are rebuild like the USA did so those cities are congestion nightmares
@Basta11
@Basta11 Жыл бұрын
@@dumyjobby while many American cities were built and designed with the car in mind. The United States and Canada actually destroyed many of its walkable mix used neighborhoods with freeway construction. They destroyed particularly communities of color, poor and immigrant communities. Tall Buildings were flattened for parking lots to abide by minimum parking regulations. Today you still see downtowns all over the US that are dead because prospective businesses can’t put up the capital to build the parking necessary to abide by the regulation. The free market (less building regulations) would have created a more diverse array of neighborhoods - more mix use, more dense, but our policies prevent that.
@Basta11
@Basta11 Жыл бұрын
@@dumyjobby the introduction of mass produced automobiles is not the culprit for our cities being car centric but rather our car centric policies such as large lot single use zoning, parking requirements, massive Federal subsidies for highway construction.
@dumyjobby
@dumyjobby Жыл бұрын
@@Basta11 i think it was the new cool thing, everybody wanted that because they were seeing as the future, people back then did have the knowledge of what those policies would result, we now see what that led to and want something different.
@robtyman4281
@robtyman4281 Жыл бұрын
Doesn't America have multi storey car parks (parking lots)? Better still, invest in better public transport and then discourage people from driving right into the city centre....by introducing a congestion charge. If you really want to drive right into the centre of a city, then you should pay to do so.
@kailahmann1823
@kailahmann1823 Жыл бұрын
transit is only one part of the equation. Also make the cities bikeable, because a bicycle has the same flexibility as a car, but takes much less space - you can store about a dozen bicycles where once one car spot was. For this you only need to add bike lanes on the main road (with space not won by removing lanes but often just my narrowing them, because you don't need more than 10 feet per car lane in a city) and remove through-traffic from parallel streets (where you then can bike on the road at low speeds and low traffic). And add very basic structures right in the residential areas - like a bakery, convenience stores, a barber and others, where the locals can WALK for their basic needs.
@majy1735
@majy1735 Жыл бұрын
"Make cities bikeable" - yes, and walkable. Added to quality public transport, this is the winning formula for a viable city, *with mobility options*. Car-centric cities are cities without option: they force you to own and drive a car for about eveything.
@baronvonjo1929
@baronvonjo1929 Жыл бұрын
Biking in 100 degree weather with humidity or in 40 degree weather is not gonna make people wanna bike.
@majy1735
@majy1735 Жыл бұрын
@@baronvonjo1929 Of course but do you believe that all US cities have "100 degree weather with humidity or 40 degree weather" in all seasons?
@intellectualrebel5340
@intellectualrebel5340 Жыл бұрын
​​@@baronvonjo1929ere in Europe we bike in some pretty nasty weather. And if the weather is too disastorous, you can always leave the bike at home and walk. Also, gloves are a thing.
@matthewboyd8689
@matthewboyd8689 Жыл бұрын
Anyone who played city skylines knows the best strategy to get rid of traffic in a growing city is Bike lanes (and separated paths) Free public transport with Trams for a district Metro to connect districts And trains to connect to other cities Along with business spread along the tram routes and a grocery store on every corner
@MichaelSalo
@MichaelSalo Жыл бұрын
You can have great cities, or you can have great parking. Choose one
@brooklynelite5428
@brooklynelite5428 Жыл бұрын
You can have both. Where there's a will, there's a way. Just have to find a planner who sees everything not only bothering drivers who most rather drive than be forced to take public transit.
@jphjphjph
@jphjphjph 10 ай бұрын
@@brooklynelite5428 No, car dependency will always hinder quality of life in a city. Cities are for people not cars. Your car brain is showing...
@brooklynelite5428
@brooklynelite5428 10 ай бұрын
@jph2k23 Cities are for everything and everyone including cars that's been around since before before our parents parents were born and now taking away people's right to drive where ever and park where is mind boggling to me not everyone wants to ride a bike nor take a train or bus.
@jphjphjph
@jphjphjph 10 ай бұрын
@@brooklynelite5428 A "right to drive" does not exist. Cars are a luxury and a tool, and yes they do have a place in our society, you are not wrong. However, cities originated due to proximity of other people and commerce. The proximity creates economies of scale. Cities are inherently human based and you can see this if you look cities founded pre-auto, like Madera, Venice, Paris, NYC, etc. Cars are too large and take up too much space, they also cause hundreds of thousands of unnecessary deaths a year, pollution, road rage, contribute to obesity, limit children, disabled, and elderly mobility, and worst of all necessitate ugly and depressing environments. I'm not saying you cannot drive. I need my car to pick up heavy things at the store too. But cars cannot continue to be the ONLY method of transit we have. Populations continue to grow and there simply is not enough space for every single person to quadruple their spacial footprint. We have to provide other daily options to not clog the roads, and then car usage will be enhanced, WHEN NECESSARY. If you still can't see why cities would benefit from this, you are being willfully ignorant or you are a very lazy person.
@MichaelSalo
@MichaelSalo 10 ай бұрын
@@brooklynelite5428 City streets are supposed to be shared by everyone. Currently they’re hogged 98% by automobiles. It’s a massive waste of space and it isn’t fair. It’s time to leave the worst ideas of the 20th century behind.
@VulcanLogic
@VulcanLogic 11 ай бұрын
The Detroit map has a small error. The parking on the far south of the map is actually rooftop parking on top of the convention center, the space to the left of that is not parking either, but a new building development. Axios Detroit has an updated map. I think the issue with the amount of parking is that Ford Field, Comerica Park, and Little Caesar's Arena are all pretty much in a row there. But they could build a couple six story parking garages and get rid of 12 surface lots.
@gatblau1
@gatblau1 Жыл бұрын
Couldn’t agree with you more. When I was visiting Minneapolis I noticed how parking had destroyed a lot of the downtown area. This probably happened in the 1970s when downtowns were being destroyed in the name of urban renewal.
@SandBoxJohn
@SandBoxJohn Жыл бұрын
Your image of downtown Washington DC is deceptive. More then half of the buildings within designated area in the image have multilevel parking garages under them.
@ianhomerpura8937
@ianhomerpura8937 Жыл бұрын
Might have counted surface parking garages probably.
@officialalonzo263
@officialalonzo263 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, parking is under the buildings in dc
@mistermood4164
@mistermood4164 10 ай бұрын
he's referring to surface parking only
@SandBoxJohn
@SandBoxJohn 10 ай бұрын
@@mistermood4164 Actually not, as he shows clips of multi level parking garages during the narration in the video.
@Basta11
@Basta11 Жыл бұрын
The video talks about the average cost of parking for an apartment. Take into account that space gets more and more expensive near the city center. Parking in the city center could be as much as 40% of the cost. That’s effectively another bedroom + bath which is roughly same size to a parking space. One of the biggest effects of mandated parking requirements is all the indoor space that wasn’t built because developers ran out of land, space, or money to create enough parking to abide by the regulation. As a result, North American buildings are shorter than they would be otherwise, they are smaller than they would be otherwise, and have less indoor human space than otherwise (as opposed to car storage). In the big picture, this is the biggest reason for high rents, lack of economic mobility, and our massive homeless problem.
@jooproos6559
@jooproos6559 Жыл бұрын
Do like they do in Amsterdam-The Netherlands!In the past they had the same trouble with parking and was making plans to build more parking spaces.They did the opposite!They made more space for bikes and public transport and less space for parking and everybody is happy now.Mind you,Amsterdam would have looked very very different than today!!
@luisvilla799
@luisvilla799 Жыл бұрын
LoL Houston laughs yeah try riding a bike for about 1:30 each way lol
@majy1735
@majy1735 Жыл бұрын
Oh no, not A'dam, please! Give me a break ith A'dam! It's completely overrated and overblown. There are tons of more interesting cities and towns in the NL than A'dam.
@odach2034
@odach2034 Жыл бұрын
@@luisvilla799 Why do people automatically assume that they're going to be forced to only use a bike when bike lanes are built? There will be trips that require a car, whether it be because of distance or cargo. No one is denying that. But the truth is, about 50% of car trips in the US are 3 miles or shorter. 3 miles that can be easily achieved by cycling or public transit if the proper infrastructure was built. Instead, people are jumping into their cars, causing an unnecessary amount of traffic. Simply because they have no choice. Most North American cities are built for the car, meaning any other form of transportation is inefficient or outright dangerous.
@luisvilla799
@luisvilla799 Жыл бұрын
@@odach2034 I can’t speak for other states but I can tell you in Houston and Dallas you absolutely need a car
@odach2034
@odach2034 Жыл бұрын
@@luisvilla799 Yes, that's the problem. Cities are built where you need a car for every trip. That's terrible planning. We need to build infrastructure that makes walking, biking, and public transport more viable. That way we wont need cars for trips under 3 miles.
@KoolDevv
@KoolDevv Жыл бұрын
This is very true! I always go to my city center but I do with they even had bus routes to the suburbs, public transportation can really fix america if they promote it better and get more infastructure! I love your video!
@TenOrbital
@TenOrbital Жыл бұрын
“Is ruining”? That boat sailed a long time ago.
@wrvpgod2155
@wrvpgod2155 Жыл бұрын
When you calculated the parking spots were you looking at the entire city or just downtown? And keep in mind that a lot of people from Philly suburbs (including Delaware and jersey residents) drive into the city and they have no intention on stopping.
@marcbuisson2463
@marcbuisson2463 Жыл бұрын
If the Philly's downtown wants to improve, it'll need to reduce the amount of parking on the surface. There's nothing wrong with building underground parking spaces, and it makes the place simply... well decent. Nobody wants to live in a parking space, and those who do are the poorest, and often the criminals. It's also why most american cities are ugly by the way. You guys bombed your neighborhoods (rich or poor), to build parking lots. Philly is an older town than haussmanian Paris. Its downtown could have been as great if not more.
@jamalgibson8139
@jamalgibson8139 Жыл бұрын
Then those residents will just have to find another place to go. There's no reason why people living downtown should have to suffer suburbanites' pollution (air and noise) and endless appetite for space just because those people want to live somewhere inconvenient.
@Littleweenaman
@Littleweenaman Жыл бұрын
imagine if a ton of parking lots were removed lmao the air would be so much cleaner and the surface of the city won't be so hot in the summers
@728huey
@728huey Жыл бұрын
I had commented on another video about the mass of parking lots, particularly around malls, big box stores, and office parks, and it's the huge prevalence of these that not only contribute to climate change but pollution of our water supply. If you actually look at usage patterns, most parking lots aren't even half occupied during the week, and office parking lots aren't occupied at all on weekends. I proposed that if they dug out half of the parking lots and converted it back to green space, they could reduce the effects climate change by lowering the temperature of the heat islands without even affecting the daily usage patterns of people parking there.
@Littleweenaman
@Littleweenaman Жыл бұрын
@@728huey bro just take any American city and remove JUST the massive parking lots and you already are so much closer to where you wanna be
@ericnelius9062
@ericnelius9062 Жыл бұрын
Great video and great formatting! You present the problem, discuss the solutions that have been successful, then put numbers behind why they are successful. Well done!
@rickydickydoodahgrimes1234
@rickydickydoodahgrimes1234 Жыл бұрын
i mean one thing about surface level parking is that some places rlly cant dig underground
@RealConstructor
@RealConstructor Жыл бұрын
You can if you buy a shuffle
@riton349
@riton349 Жыл бұрын
Fixed the problem. Just built multi level residential buildings on those parking lots
@mst4309
@mst4309 Жыл бұрын
The thing is also, that America (and maybe Canada?) is the only country where this is done absolutely everywhere, and the fact that nowhere else in the world has done this doesn’t occur to people as a problem. First of all… ugly af
@VulcanLogic
@VulcanLogic Жыл бұрын
Australia and New Zealand are also bad (not as bad as the US), but that's the end of list.
@jasonreed7522
@jasonreed7522 Жыл бұрын
Its not just America who does this. For all of history minor powers have emulated the nation they percieved as the most powerful/influential/important be it Rome, Charlemagne, France, Victorian England/ the British Empire, or the United States today. Today the US sits in that #1 spot of biggest economy, strongest military, widest cultural influence, ect. (If the world was a game of civ then the USA won all victory conditions in the 50s and 60s) All of that is just natural, lesser and regional powers like Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Chile, ect are going to emulate the ways of larger powers like the US and China. The problem is that 1950s car infrastructure planning has since been revealed to be incredibly flawed amd problematic so its time for America to move on and set a new example that everyone owning a car isn't the ideal, rich people wanting to take the same train as poor people is.
@VhenRaTheRaptor
@VhenRaTheRaptor Жыл бұрын
​@VulcanForge we are nowhere near this bad. Auckland's downtown if anything might have too little parking. And the majority of dedicated parking in downtown is in multi level parks.
@VulcanLogic
@VulcanLogic Жыл бұрын
@@VhenRaTheRaptor Definitely not as bad as the US, no. But compared to France, Netherlands, Germany, and most of Asia, you're not as good.
@ConservatEV
@ConservatEV Жыл бұрын
At first I thought of an objection: grocery shopping. Doing that without a car used to be arduous. However… then I remembered free home delivery is a thing in cities. Not where I live (a rural area, too far a what from the major stores) but that’s fine. I chose to live in a rural area 20 miles away from the city. It’s true that I do have to drive to work (no mass transit between home and work) but I also have to pay to park there. I would like to see more surface lots covered with solar panels. I’m a proponent of EVs (I drive a Model 3) and having the sun hitting the lot help generate power to charge the cars parked there is a no-brainer. I’m already paying to park there, I’d pay a bit more to get some “free” fuel for my car! Plus any extra can be stored to help shore up the grid for everyone. It just seems like something that has to happen. Anyway, the point is that the limitations to having as much parking can be solved with things like grocery delivery and the remaining lots can generate more value than they are currently with other innovations like solar panels and mass energy storage. It just takes willingness to adapt and change.
@RealConstructor
@RealConstructor Жыл бұрын
It depends what is rural in the US. I live on the countryside in a town of 20,000. We have 7 supermarkets in town and 3 supermarkets that deliver at home. But only one delivers for free if you order more than €35 and you can choose out of different delivery times (this supermarket only exits online, it has no shops). The second delivers for €1.85 a time and only if you order more than €50 and you can choose out of a few delivery times (this supermarket has two shops in town). The third has a subscription form of delivery, you pay €10 a month and you can order as much or as little as you want and you can pick the delivery time yourself (this supermarket doesn’t have a shop in town, but in two neighboring towns).
@baronvonjo1929
@baronvonjo1929 Жыл бұрын
I'm against EVs because it is only toys for the rich. EVs will be terrible used cats. My car is literally older than me at 24 years old. A EV battery and all that tech won't last that long. How do you propose to help people afford such a car. A EV is practically worthless after 10 years or whenever the battery goes out. Solar panels on the car is just another technology on the car that could break over time.
@ConservatEV
@ConservatEV Жыл бұрын
@@baronvonjo1929 I agree that EVs aren’t the cheapest cars on the market, but there are many affordable options. Add in the fuel savings and far lower maintenance costs really there aren’t many better long term vehicle purchases than a Tesla Model 3. You can get a cheaper new car, but it’ll cost you more in the long run. And it’s not that wildly expensive. They can be had new for under $40k and used under $30k. The batteries are expensive… they’re also far better than they used to be. There’s no reason to expect a Tesla LFP battery (which is in the Model 3 base model, the least expensive model they make) to degrade below a reasonable range in a decade. It could still be useable in 20 years! They really have improved greatly. The other thing is… automakers aren’t going to make new internal combustion engine (ICE) passenger vehicles in 10-15 years. That’s not conjecture, that is their stated plan! They’re phasing them out. Why? Lots of factors, the main one being that EVs have already rendered ICE vehicles obsolete. They’re quieter, faster, more responsive, easier to produce, safer, and WAY more energy efficient. Keep in mind that EVs are getting the equivalent of over 120 miles “per gallon” because electric motors are 300% (or more!) energy efficient. That’s why it’s only costing me $0.04 per mile in “fuel” now, I was paying $0.12 or more per mile before! That is a HUGE savings over time! Thousands of dollars a year! How can people afford EVs? They can’t afford NOT to drive them frankly! Anything else is literally a waste of money! I’m dead serious, the math doesn’t lie. So, it’s not a matter of if ICE will be wiped out by EVs but when. There are already predictions that ICE vehicles could fall to less than 50% of all new cars sold worldwide in less than 2 years. That doesn’t mean EVs will be over 50%, there are other options (hybrids. hydrogen, etc) but the days of most new cars being ICE are numbered. It’s not a very high number either. This is happening.
@baronvonjo1929
@baronvonjo1929 Жыл бұрын
@@ConservatEV I agree with everything you say. But please don't pretend 30k or even 20k is affordable. Also you may be saving tons of money not using gas. But the initial costs alone will make such savings impossible to even start. Its very expensive being poor as you cant do things such as that. Doing a lump sum to save in the long run. The American car fleet is literally the oldest its ever been because new cars are just way to expensive. The younger generations will never be able to afford all this in large numbers. I also don't think EVs are sustainable at all. Public transportation is. But that has its own issues and will never happen in my life. I am not convinced we have enough materials in this world to build millions and millions of evs along with any other battery year after year for decades. Also supply and demand. If everyone has a ev charging then it won't be cheap to charge at all. And let's not forget all the millions of people who can't use evs because they don't have driveways. You can't have cables all over parking lots and sidewalks. And good luck convincing apartments to build charging ports. I don't actually hate EVs or anything. They just currently make absolutely no sense. No doubt it will get better.
@baronvonjo1929
@baronvonjo1929 Жыл бұрын
@@ConservatEV I was rereading your comment and just want to say most of the world will still have ICE cars in the future and automakers will be making them for decades unless they plan on ending car sales for places around the world outside of developed nations. I bet many people will still have ICE cars even after new ICE bans happen until the law punishes poor people for not being able to afford new cars like places in Europe do when you try to enter a city with a old polluting car.
@Chamait
@Chamait Жыл бұрын
Happy 1K subs!
@shortcutdocumentaries
@shortcutdocumentaries Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!!!
@contecrayononpaper
@contecrayononpaper 10 ай бұрын
If not for parking lots, where would so many people sit in their vehicles with the engines running?
@CharmfulCarlie
@CharmfulCarlie Жыл бұрын
Do these buildings have basement parking? It can save a lot of space and would compress the buildings.
@pirazel7858
@pirazel7858 Жыл бұрын
Surface level downtown parking lots are also very unique to th USA, you do not find them in Europe, Asia or south America
@jamallhayden2512
@jamallhayden2512 Жыл бұрын
Thank You!
@miguelgrandon2720
@miguelgrandon2720 Жыл бұрын
7:11 this is Santiago de Chile, my home city
@silentservant_
@silentservant_ Жыл бұрын
0:21 inverted pentagram in Washington…
@im3phirebird81
@im3phirebird81 Жыл бұрын
It's even in the thumbnail.
@Shane_Shaney
@Shane_Shaney 5 ай бұрын
Do you live in Chattanooga? I noticed a decent amount of your overhead shots are from there.
@brbarlow195
@brbarlow195 Жыл бұрын
Where did you get the Atlanta city population from? Missing almost 200,000 people
@barrettozier5564
@barrettozier5564 Жыл бұрын
and limit luxury developments
@rahulraoniar6069
@rahulraoniar6069 10 ай бұрын
It is thoroughly documented in the book "The High Cost of Free Parking" by Donald Shoup.
@BobbyT.
@BobbyT. Жыл бұрын
How does this channel not have more subs
@linuxman7777
@linuxman7777 Жыл бұрын
If no parking is available, or if it costs money, I won't drive to said place. I will take the bus or walk. I only need to drive 1x a week, so if I do, it will be to a place where I can easily park.
@hamdanalmaeeni101
@hamdanalmaeeni101 Жыл бұрын
Why not put bult in building parking
@ladymorwendaebrethil-feani4031
@ladymorwendaebrethil-feani4031 Жыл бұрын
4:44 this place really looks like ireland.
@cherryghost15
@cherryghost15 Жыл бұрын
Great new book with facts and numbers that'll blow your mind. Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World by Henry Grabar
@kurtvanecstasy
@kurtvanecstasy Жыл бұрын
How do you only have 730 subs???
@malaquiasalfaro81
@malaquiasalfaro81 Ай бұрын
Anyone know where I can find more mid tempo jazz music like this lol
@farriskhan2352
@farriskhan2352 Жыл бұрын
Parking spaces per house is not the relevant metric when the majority of people are commuting into the core from outside of the core. It is not wasted space because the cars are there during the day. The relevant metric should be parking spaces/[(household*average adult household size) + commuting workers]
@fthcm101
@fthcm101 Жыл бұрын
Parking in any city downtown is a major rip off. When you go to a parking lot in the city that I live in, there is no live parking attendant. So you have to scan the QR code that requires you to pay the full day parking rate, even if your just going to be parked for two hours. What a rip off!
@RealConstructor
@RealConstructor Жыл бұрын
That’s not a ripoff, that’s capitalism. You don’t have to park there.
@cliffcorson4000
@cliffcorson4000 Жыл бұрын
Not all places have "too much parking" Using Philadelphia and New York as having too much parking you've obviously never been there. Philadelphia you can search hours to try to find parking
@billnotice9957
@billnotice9957 Жыл бұрын
Hmmm? So??? Why don't these cities that are losing so much money by having Suburbs do not just jettison the burbs???? Why to cities claw to keep less dense parts of it from leaving the city? I am typing this as a watch empty buses drive by in Detroit??
@tombradydid9114
@tombradydid9114 10 ай бұрын
Parking lots are the least of our problems. Their not the root cause of the problem.
@felicetanka
@felicetanka Жыл бұрын
Business govt.
@MotownModels
@MotownModels Жыл бұрын
Your thumbnail shows "Detroit" when it's actually Vegas.
@shortcutdocumentaries
@shortcutdocumentaries Жыл бұрын
I appreciate it, fixed now!
@MotownModels
@MotownModels Жыл бұрын
@@shortcutdocumentaries nice!
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
Soviet microdistrict vs USA Suburbia
@timokho20
@timokho20 Жыл бұрын
I think its also mainly because cities used to be very unsafe and not nice to live in, people just didnt want to live there anymore and would rather live bigger, safer and quieter in a suburb. Now that most cities are a lot safer and are also going through gentrification we see this upshift in demand for people that wish to move back in. Its all about supply and demand in the end. Also to note is that many US cities are actually still quite dense, primarily historic cities that didnt build parking lots, such as Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston, DC, Baltimore, San Francisco, Pittsburg, Richmond. Its mainly decaying rustbelt and relatively newly sunbelt cities that face parking lot problems. I can definitely see how in 50 years most cities will be quite a lot denser as long as they get safer. Do note tho that suburbs have a different purpose and qualities than living in the city. most people will want to stay in the suburb, tearing them down to make them 15 minute cities is not realistic nor desirable. We should acknowledge their differences while trying to make downtown more appealing.
@Awesomeguy614
@Awesomeguy614 Жыл бұрын
You don't have to tear down suburbs to make them pedestrian friendly. Allowing homeowners and developers to build more dense lots with duplexes, fourplexes, and ADUs while also allowing certain amenities like grocers and cafes within the neighborhood would make them dramatically more pedestrian friendly while maintaining the positive aspects of suburbs.
@ReedmanFL
@ReedmanFL Ай бұрын
Using Detroit as an example is comically bad. In 1950, Detroit had 1.8 million population, tied with LA for fourth largest US city. Today, Detroit has 620k population. Detroit doesn't have a 'too much parking" problem. It has a "too few people" problem. Imagine if in 1950 Detroit spent the money for trains and subways for 1.8 million. In 2024, the cost of operating them would be ruinous. A reminder that Detroit was the largest municipal bankruptcy in US history -- Detroit didn't go bankrupt because it had insufficient infrastructure. P.S. Memphis would be in equally bad shape, except that back-when, Tennessee allowed cities to forcibly annex their suburbs. When Elvis bought Graceland (1957), it was not in Memphis, it was in Whitehaven (annexed 1970).
@jl3059
@jl3059 Жыл бұрын
Went to the cucky school of Rockafeller eh
@jeffreyhawthornegoines8727
@jeffreyhawthornegoines8727 10 ай бұрын
I was born in a very large city in Europe, and lived in a very large one in America. While traveling across the city for work or pleasure, the subway or the bus are certainly the way to go. On the other hand, pushing for people to get rid of their cars is very sly. We need parking spaces for our cars. Not having one anymore seriously diminishes our choices and independance. As for going to see Aunt Julia out of the city, it becomes so difficult that most of the time we will not go. Leaving for the week end and discovering beautiful landscapes? How, now that we do not have our car anymore? What if we are distressed and need to escape for a day or two? It has become impossible. Is this what certain persons want, to be stuck and without a choice? Yes, parking lots can be large. And so what? What are we going to build in their place? More business buildings, for an economy that would forever expand? For the creation of pseudo idyllic car free places? We do have some of those. A number are nice. In Rome, Julius Caesar restricted trucks (those of the time) to run only at night. Yes, cities are difficult. It is hard to all live together. A good balance is what is necessary, not a totalitarian thinking that plays at being liberal.
@mattreedah
@mattreedah Жыл бұрын
The only issue is this video glosses over the fact that cities don’t actually own these spaces.
@smileyeagle1021
@smileyeagle1021 Жыл бұрын
Many of these spaces exist due to city regulations though, so even though the cities don't own the space, they do control them.
@jasonreed7522
@jasonreed7522 Жыл бұрын
That what zoning laws are for, the city creates the rules and regulations to guide the market towards its desired goals. In the past they mandated parking via parking minimums, they could just as easily change it to parking maximums with "access minimums" so that a subway stop half a block away counts as 95% of the building's access capacity. (And realistically the only access that truly matters is emergency services, everything else is just economics for the building owner)
@eechauch5522
@eechauch5522 Жыл бұрын
Obviously changing the rules wouldn’t make the parking lots disappear over night. But the next time a property gets sold, refurbished or redeveloped it can be done very differently then now. A Restaurant might turn a few parking spaces into outdoor seating, an old storefront could be filled by a business which currently would need more parking and finally some of the parking lots will be sold off and redeveloped, when they are obviously not needed and therefore only cost the owner money. It’s probably going to take at least 5-10 years until there is visible change, probably more in the range of 20 but I’ll happen, because it’s not in the interest of businesses to keep around space they only lose money on.
@mattiasjohnson356
@mattiasjohnson356 Жыл бұрын
You say per household, the text say per house 🙄
@kevinbryer2425
@kevinbryer2425 Жыл бұрын
High rise structures should have parking garages built right into their envelope.
@justanotheryoutubechannel
@justanotheryoutubechannel Жыл бұрын
Often they do, but the issue is that there’s usually too much parking, in vegas a lot of new buildings are built with 5 of their 12 or so stories being parking, and a lot of it isn’t used. Most places just need less parking period.
@josepheridu3322
@josepheridu3322 Жыл бұрын
The upside of cars, the ability to move when you want to where you want, has some cost. Sometimes parking is that tradeoff. We miss medieval times, but if medieval people had the comfort of modern cars, they would certainly used them. Car free cities in Europe were made before car was made, they are very expensive for just a 5x5 apartment. They are tourist cities, not cities to live for 90% of people unless you are very rich or you don't mind living on high rent all your life. I do agree parking underground and on buildings makes more sense.
@joygibbons5482
@joygibbons5482 Жыл бұрын
I’ve just driven back from a medieval (actually Roman) city, Canterbury. It contains houses with gardens and few people live in apartments. It’s no more expensive than more rural/residential areas locally. Most homes in the city are owner occupied. So,all your points are moot.
@eechauch5522
@eechauch5522 Жыл бұрын
Im sorry, but that just completely made up. Most car free European city centers had cars and parking lots in them at some point. Many cities were completely bombed out after WW2 and quite a few rebuilt in a car-friendly fashion. They aren’t all Venice or Rothenburg ob der Tauber. We built urban freeways, ripped out tram tracks, widened streets, turned plazas into parking lots and built car depended suburbs outside of the city. We just realized after a few decades this was a terrible idea and have been hard at work slowly reversing the damage for the last half century. If you honestly believe there aren’t people in Europe who love the convenience of cars and will protest every single car space „lost“ you’re living in a fantasy world. Quite a few of our „historic“ building have been rebuild in the 20th Century. Living in city center is a bit pricey, but making it a worse place to live to lower rents isn’t exactly a good solution. North Americans instead bulldozed their cities themselves and now claim they have been always been that way and can’t be changed.
@josepheridu3322
@josepheridu3322 Жыл бұрын
@@eechauch5522 If you see car ownership per capita, most Europan countries are not so far from USA: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_vehicles_per_capita A few cities in Europe are very walkable and nice to live, but these are utopic places made by huge government intervention and only rich people live there, and tourists. Most natives have been displaced to perifery.
@HessianHunter
@HessianHunter Жыл бұрын
The more other people use cars, the worse your car gets. A lone person with a car is a transportation god, but a whole populace using cars to get to buildings separated by parking lots aren't any more relatively mobile than they'd be in a car-free medieval city. If everyone uses cars, the grocery store that would have been a 5-10 minute walk away is going to be a 5-10 minute drive away instead. I lived in car-dependent suburbia for decades and I'll never ever go back to needing a car to do literally every single thing outside my home.
@josepheridu3322
@josepheridu3322 Жыл бұрын
@@HessianHunter I understand this, but there is also the business space is also a tradeoff. Smaller close stores may be small but don't have the diversity of big stores. People don't want to make 8 stops if they just can drive to walmart and buy all they need for the week. I'm not saying your model is bad, I'm just saying that the car centric model won because how easy it is.
@jackiepie7423
@jackiepie7423 Жыл бұрын
the video's title is poorly worded. it should be how drivers are ruining America with their slothful need for excessive parking. their the ones behind the wheel.
@brokenrecord3095
@brokenrecord3095 Жыл бұрын
excessive parking we have is often gov't mandated. driving IS pretty ruinous, but it's not the drivers' fault we have these massive asphalt wastelands
@odach2034
@odach2034 Жыл бұрын
Cant blame the drivers. They literally have no choice. Its either use a car, or use another form of transportation that's inefficient or dangerous.
@jackiepie7423
@jackiepie7423 Жыл бұрын
it's the gas huffer's fault for not fighting back against international oil when the USA hit peak oil in the 70's. it's the drivers fault for not fighting back against their filthy habits back in the 80's when it became painfully obvious they were killing the planet. it's the men and woman behind the wheel's fault for waging war for oil in the 90's. it's the speed addicts fault for allowing their favorite pusher to attack the the USA on 9/11/2001 with no consequence. It's the "drive until you can buy" crowd's fault for the 2008 financial crisis. it's the motorheads fault for driving up the death rate on the road during "work from home" pandemic by driving even ^more^ recklessly. And today it is ^your^ fault for saying such stupid things "it's not the drivers' fault" fifty years of Petrodollar recycling.
@jackiepie7423
@jackiepie7423 Жыл бұрын
@@odach2034 they have had 50 years to wake up and smell the petro. it can't possibly kill more brain cells.
@liketotallymatthew
@liketotallymatthew Жыл бұрын
The picture in your thumbnail isn’t even Detroit, it’s Las Vegas. Don’t misrepresent my city, please.
@tomhoornstra1379
@tomhoornstra1379 Жыл бұрын
For the same reason you can reduce the number of toilets.
@tobygoodguy4032
@tobygoodguy4032 Жыл бұрын
7:35 That's an urban myth. (Unless you identify as 'oppressed'.) 🤠
@baronvonjo1929
@baronvonjo1929 Жыл бұрын
Actually every city I go to has too little parking. There is no way to get to the city without a car. No way to get to a bus stop or train without a car. So while Im normally for lots of stuff in the urbanism movement. I completely disagree with this video. Absolutely no alternatives currently to replace this that would make normal people's lives harder. You mention more parking than cars in city well tons of people dont live in the city but visit for work or leisure. They are ugly I know. But just how it is. Gonna have to fix a ton of other stuff like zoning before you get rid of them. I really think you have a lot of good point here. I hate to be a doomer but it just wont happen anytime soon. Keep fighting for it of course. But there are just so many issues holding such a thing back from being adopted across the nation. A few cities will get it. But even then I doubt it will be really good. Our government has shown us they cant get current public services right already. Do really really expect them to do a good job with public transportation? They definitely will screw this up.
@nihouma11
@nihouma11 Жыл бұрын
Which cities have too little parking? Typically, cities with lower percentages of parking (but they all have parking) have higher economic output and human development. When I was in DC sometimes I had to spend a little time hunting for parking, but it was never impossible to find. Meanwhile in Dallas there's parking everywhere you look, but very few mom and pop shops, and very few people on the streets, and much higher rates of obesity.
@tylerlewis2766
@tylerlewis2766 Жыл бұрын
Living in a large city has got to be the ultimate bugman, you will own nothing living experience.
@ianhomerpura8937
@ianhomerpura8937 Жыл бұрын
Suburbs are worse, everything is owned by large corporations, your car can be taken from you if you miss paying installments, even your house can be repossessed by HOAs if they want to do so.
@brokenrecord3095
@brokenrecord3095 Жыл бұрын
well to each his own I guess. You're free to not live in a big city if you wish, but you could never pay me enough to live in the suburbs
@partiellementecreme
@partiellementecreme Жыл бұрын
We don’t own less than suburbanites do. They own their homes, I own mine. They’re disabled and need a $50,000 five-ton wheelchair whereas I can walk everywhere in ten minutes and spend my extra money on vacations. Rural homesteaders own something that I don’t, namely productive land and animals. Good for them.
@tylerlewis2766
@tylerlewis2766 Жыл бұрын
@Ian Homer Pura your house can't be taken by an HOA unless you live in a hellscape like the north east. Here in Florida I have never paid my dues and they still pay for my internet and I still use the water park built into the development.
@tylerlewis2766
@tylerlewis2766 Жыл бұрын
@@partiellementecreme what American city are you in that is walkable?
@Steve-tj9on
@Steve-tj9on Жыл бұрын
They showed Washington DC 😂 . And its far from having massive parking garages.
@tkokflux6322
@tkokflux6322 Жыл бұрын
I get it but I am deadass tired of these type of channels like GENUINELY tired we get it car dependency bad... I feel like i ve seen legit 60 videos such as this already
@RealConstructor
@RealConstructor Жыл бұрын
You’re the one watching them all. Make a choice in life. It is that simple.
@johnnyjohnnyjohnny11
@johnnyjohnnyjohnny11 Жыл бұрын
Don't watch it then?
@partiellementecreme
@partiellementecreme Жыл бұрын
Tap “not interested” and teach your algorithm to stop suggesting them. Don’t watch on them and much less comment on them or you’ll make it worse.
@ax1338
@ax1338 Жыл бұрын
So don't watch.
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