Much of the current thinking on urban parking strategy — including many of the recommendations in the city’s Walker report — are drawn from the work of UCLA urban planning professor Donald Shoup, a national authority on modern parking management.
The “Shoupian” vision, applied by Walker Parking Consultants to Bloomington, includes regulation of demand through pricing, a scheme that can also fund downtown development. Consumers drop coins in the meters to pay for lighting, sidewalks, benches and repairs.
With a parking meter, the more you are willing to pay, the longer you are allowed to stay.
Shoup, who wrote “The High Price of Free Parking,” has been labeled a “parking rock star” by the Wall Street Journal. Walker’s 85 percent measure of parking space occupancy as an upper limit for best practices is a “Shoupian” idea. When it was applied here, it revealed that Bloomington’s on-street parking supply fell short of the mark in 24 of 56 downtown blocks.
The most notable of Shoup’s parking “laws” in action is the “SFpark” project in San Francisco, detailed in a short video about the project at sfpark.org.
“It shows in three minutes what it took me 800 pages to write,” Shoup said in an email.
The video depicts cartoon cars under the pressure of dynamic pricing. Prices at specific meters, all computer controlled, go up if occupancy level on a block exceeds 80 percent and drop if occupancy runs below 60 percent. Under this model, Shoup believes, at least two open spaces on each block can be maintained, thus preventing the waste of fossil fuels in circling the block.
The plan is in place in a portion of San Francisco, where on one block, meter prices have risen to close to $5 an hour. On others, a quarter can buy you an hour. A driver can find the best combination of price and location by browsing the project’s website before heading for a destination.
What Bloomington Mayor Mark Kruzan has offered is less audacious than the SFpark project, but rests on the same principles. And revenues, he has said, will be directed toward beautifying the downtown.
— Jon Blau