Production value looks awesome! So excited for all the new videos/podcasts in the works, just became a member yesterday 👍🏽
@xXxcru3ltyxXx Жыл бұрын
love the work you've done but i love it even more that you've decided to surround yourself with talented individuals who can turn your ideas into well produced and edited content!
@NotJustBikes Жыл бұрын
Chuck is correct, once again!
@mnsegler1 Жыл бұрын
I do love it. And I’m so happy that StrongTowns is now doing videos that will reach even more people. Also you have a winner in Michael Pasternock. This video is well produced and tightly edited maximizing the message and keeping your interest!
@kurt.dresner Жыл бұрын
It's so good.
@herohalv4543 Жыл бұрын
"this is one of the most valulable pieces of land in the city due to its location, so they thought it'd be a great place for a parking lot" 💀
@strongtowns Жыл бұрын
Glad you caught that 😅
@filescopying Жыл бұрын
🤣😂🤣😂 This expensive land should have something that generates little revenue, lowers property values, and reduces pedestrian safety.
@Novusod Жыл бұрын
The reason that decision was made was because most of the population lives outside of the downtown core. They only way that population can reach the businesses downtown is if they drive there and have a place to park.
@torzsmokus Жыл бұрын
@@Novusod they should set up public transportation instead (and put the parking lots to the non downtown end of the line).
@whazzat8015 Жыл бұрын
Absentee/remote land owners/REITs have interest only in short term rent, not building sustainable communities or replacing the ones they tore down and "developed". Look at who owns it. They prolly don't live there.
@petermullins3766 Жыл бұрын
I'm a local elected official, and strong towns/not just bikes has truly woken me up to the importance of walkable, human-friendly downtown spaces. I'm so excited to see more guidance on how to make these spaces a reality in the US, and while I think my town does OK in terms of accessibility, I can't express my gratitude enough and hope I can use this information to help make my borough yet another example of a place that is designed for people to live! ❤️
@sarahrose9944 Жыл бұрын
Very happy to hear this from an elected official! Thank you for your service!
@mina_en_suiza Жыл бұрын
Here in Switzerland, most parking spaces in downtown areas are privately owned underground parking garages, often up to 10 floors deep. Americans should love these, as it is a possibility for companies to make money. Capitalism! Yeah!
@nyosdroid868 Жыл бұрын
Maybe repeal zoning next?
@nathanlonghair Жыл бұрын
That is wonderful! Great to hear of more people in places of influence learning of the effects of walkable neighbourhoods
@Iceechibi Жыл бұрын
@@mina_en_suiza Unfortunately, there are a lot of places in the US it’s impossible to have structures underground because of the type of rock that is below ground. I.e., see Texas - most of the underground is limestone past 4 ft deep and why you don’t see a lot of underground structures.
@EdwardErfurt Жыл бұрын
Imagine how many great places could exist if we simply remove parking minimums.
@greenmachine5600 Жыл бұрын
Ikr, it would be so much better
@redpanda1065 Жыл бұрын
such as turning a car park into a real one
@pj23nl Жыл бұрын
mandatory things are freedom in murica
@michalandrejmolnar3715 Жыл бұрын
Yes!
@Steve-tj9on Жыл бұрын
Screw sprawl n crawl
@logicalfundy Жыл бұрын
"Park once" . . . keep that message. Keep that idea. A lot of people are so used to driving everywhere individually. But a walkable city is where you only have to drive in once. Doesn't mean that parking is difficult. It just means that you can do everything by parking once, rather than having to drive to every single business you want to visit individually. Since the city isn't spaced out by parking lots everywhere you go, businesses can be close enough together that you can realistically walk to all of them.
@nicolaim4275 Жыл бұрын
You can even expand this concept to have the parking lots on the perimeter of the city and then almost completely remove cars from the streets.
@wck Жыл бұрын
So if I go to like 5 shops I’ll have to carry everything by hand from store to store before lugging it all back to my car that is parked far away… ???
@WillmobilePlus Жыл бұрын
That entails that these people drop the anti-car zealotry and actually concentrate on building something worth walking around first. Some of these people are so off their meds, they would demand that driveways be "banned".
@nicolaim4275 Жыл бұрын
@@wck OR.. and hear me out here, you have a tram, bike or other type of transportation for such occurrences. Here in Europe I often take the train from the suburbs to downtown (ten minutes), walk from one end of the no-cars shopping street and then take the bus back home (thirteen minutes).
@Brent-jj6qi Жыл бұрын
@@WillmobilePlus speaking of off their meds, what the hell is this entire reply man? You make zero sense
@geekingoutwithshad Жыл бұрын
This is absolutely correct. I once wanted to open up a skatepark in an older warehouse. It required a zone change to be a recreational facility. All the requirements were easy to meet except one thing, meeting the parking requirements. They required 30 some parking spaces and at least 3 handicap spots. That wasn't even possible with the space available. It was a warehouse and designed for loading and unloading trucks and that was about it. Even though there was plenty of street parking and a neighborhood nearby I still needed a parking lot. So I couldn't do it and the space never got updated until many years later when the warehouse got leveled and apartments were put there with underground parking.
@strongtowns Жыл бұрын
Man, that hurt to read. Thank you for sharing. This is why we do what we do- so people like you can start their dream businesses and improve their towns.
@co7013 Жыл бұрын
I wonder how many people that come to a skatepark require handicap spots. Or, depending on the location and environment, parking in general. You would expect them to be young and healthy and at least some of them coming by other means. So these rules are oblivious of considerations like these.
@ShadLife Жыл бұрын
@@co7013 I agree. They also required ground floor and handicap accessible restrooms for the zoning change.
@brokenrecord3095 Жыл бұрын
@@co7013 Actually I kinda disagree with you about the HC spots. Yes, you'd suspect that a disabled person won't be skating, but maybe their child or loved one is. You don't get to unilaterally decide which businesses are the sort of businesses that handicap people won't frequent, and get to ignore ADA standards. We should make our cities as accessible as we can to all. In fact HC spots are the only parking that I think SHOULD be required- those people are the only ones who actually have a good reason to be driving there. Your fully mobile skaters young can walk to the skate park, but maybe Grandpa can't.
@natashacoolen4022 Жыл бұрын
Wow, thirty parking spaces seems like a lot! I’m sorry that this was such a barrier to you. I agree that accessible parking and bathrooms need to be included. Many folks that you may not clock as disabled, and who may be able to participate in small amounts of activity or participate by cheering on their friends and family benefit from those features :) Families and friend groups that have a disabled or chronically ill member often have to take their patronage elsewhere when a business isn’t accessible to everyone. Employees may also benefit from accessibility features. I had a change in health, and couldn’t continue at my job even though I could still perform it well. The facility was just set up in a way that I couldn’t easily enter my place of work, or access the bathroom.
@Sparticulous Жыл бұрын
Always blows my mind when people outside of a city who do not pay taxes to the city DEMAND residents who pay taxes to pay for infrastracture whose primary purpose is to accomodate free loaders who travel into the city
@ladyravendale1 Жыл бұрын
Subsidized car dependent suburbia go brrrrrr
@maricelasanchez8439 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely. The focus should be on improving the lives of city residents first and foremost because they are paying city fees and taxes.
@Matty002 Жыл бұрын
@@ladyravendale1 it literally goes vrrrrrooom 😆
@Dark_Detective Жыл бұрын
That's not mindblowing. What's mindblowing is when they get it.
@011angelfire Жыл бұрын
Commuter taxes can help address this, but it’s not a catch-all. My local tax withholding is paid to the city I work in, since the suburb I live in provides a 100 percent offset to incentivize housing demand in the area. We are not a bedroom community so we have the commercial base to do this, but the problem with this is that it leaves people with the doubly wrong impression that the suburbs are not only self-sufficient, but subsidizing downtown. First, the housing demand is artificial. Take away the residential tax offset, and housing demand (and values) in this suburb would drop like a rock. Second, this model depends on the jobs located within urban cores. We’re not a high-income suburb despite the city, but *because* of it. Where do you think all the jobs that we all have are located?
@Robin_Goodfellow Жыл бұрын
I love your positive tone. It's a balm against the jadedness and despair that I and many other urbanists have about the state of our cities.
@michaelimbesi2314 Жыл бұрын
I agree. The positivity is really great and refreshing.
@geoffreyvanpelt6147 Жыл бұрын
Optimism is important in the darkest of times.
@planetarysolidarity Жыл бұрын
I remember having a positive tone - back in the 70s. Happy that you are having a powerful impact with yours.
@matthewgladback8905 Жыл бұрын
"People like the big ideas ... public transit, affordable housing, but they are very uncomfortable with the specific strategies and decisions it takes to actually achieve those goals." Saying the quiet parts out loud here. This is kind of in my backyard, as my Mom lives nearby. She's definitely one of the people being addressed with this statement, though, I'm sorry to say. My personal experience is that, even in the heart of Fayetteville, the only remotely city-like area in the whole region, there is still an overabundance of parking, and stroads cordon off whatever little urbanity there is. People visiting the old post office plaza area can't be bothered to park in the parking lot just around the corner, they feel entitled to park right in front of their specific destination. The street parking is a bit oversupplied, as we've only parked in that lot like once. They sometimes close that area to vehicular traffic, for events. It's obviously a nicer place without all the vehicles trolling for convenient parking spots. I don't mean to be too hard to Fayetteville, as it's got some things going on that other places here could only hope for. There is a nucleus of urban form left in there, and it seems there are residents who see that as something aspirational.
@AssBlasster Жыл бұрын
If you consider Dickson St and the university campus as an extension of the walkable "city-like area", you can perhaps convince yourself that Fayetteville is actually pretty good. We had the same parking issues with the downtown area in Gainesville Florida. I always felt off in downtown, despite having the right elements for a walkable neighborhood.
@Blackadder75 Жыл бұрын
my quiet part would be 'but people ARE COMPLETE MORONS WHO DON'T KNOW WHAT IS GOOD FOR THEM AND ARE EASILY BRAINWASHED BY CAR LOBBYISTS' maybe it's better to keep that a quiet part....
@zephaniahgreenwell8151 Жыл бұрын
The reaction when I suggest that we should remove parking on Dickson and Arkansas Ave 🙄. The city would do better to use that space for scooters and bikes instead of putting up signs saying that they can't be on the sidewalk. They should expand the bussing too, but the school is only concerned about using them for shuttles on game day, not as viable transportation for residents.
@Normal...Hinged... Жыл бұрын
@@AssBlasster I felt the same way when I went to UF. I loved walking around campus but downtown felt like just a tiny area with cars everywhere robbing the space, because it is a pretty nice place. I loved walking in and around campus the most. I went back there recently and things are better and so many things are getting built around campus it's a really transformative change that is making the area more walkable and enjoyable. There are less parking spaces and the speed limit is lower on University. I hope the buses that only came every 15 minutes are a little more frequent nowadays!
@whazzat8015 Жыл бұрын
Fayetteville is a hot market dominated by outside investors. Look at who owns it. They don't live there. Look at Austin, same deal. Reduced parking regs often just mean the neighborhoods surrounding these zones have to provide parking for commercial interests who see them only as a harvestable "amenity", externalizing their costs. No sense of shared buy in by the "entertainment districts" (read bars) and residents. Just seen as cheap land to flip, or looking for an easy buck. Absentee/remote land owners/REITs have interest only in short term rent, not building sustainable communities or replacing the ones they tore down and "developed", ones often with the qualities they use as selling points.
@strongtowns Жыл бұрын
Thank you for tuning in and we hope you enjoyed this case study of Fayetteville's progress! What are some victories happening in your community?
@brandonm1708 Жыл бұрын
Rochester, MN! The DMC corporation (based off Mayo Clinic) is working with the city government to build up a vibrant downtown and increase tax capacity. The work they’ve done in their 10 years of existence is not too large, but already has a very visible footprint that, given another 10-20 years, will make it a great town to be in! (PS, I heard your organization is based out of Minnesota, so it’d be cool for you to work with them) :)
@michaelkellagher3507 Жыл бұрын
Question - San Jose recently voted on a similar topic and I believe it’s the same parking minimums from this video. Any thoughts on how San Jose went about it or anything interesting to know from that process? Thanks for the content
@jellevg-x4u Жыл бұрын
Here in Utrecht, the Netherlands im privileged. But I hope we get standardization of public transport infrastructure in NL/Germany/France/Belgium :)
@zaroes Жыл бұрын
Boise, Idaho, is trying to better build density instead of just building more single family homes and are also trying to get a public transit system(BRT, commuter rail, and an Amtrak connection).
@charlieswearingen9156 Жыл бұрын
This is my community. I have a lot of hope for the future. I’ve reached out to city councilors about closing Dickson street to cars and they seem open. There is a plan in progress to remove lanes from south school to make the area more accessible. The city council is currently looking at approving a new active transportation plan which has a goal of having 90% of the population be within 1/4 mile of a multi-use trail.
@GeneralLiuofBoston1911 Жыл бұрын
Are parking lots ruining our cities and towns? YES.
@DiogenesOfCa Жыл бұрын
F#CK YES - Fixed it.
@trinkCOKEorDIE Жыл бұрын
No. Absolutely not. Unless you don't have a car, but then you can't understand.
@taoliu3949 Жыл бұрын
@@trinkCOKEorDIE It absolutely is. It's the #1 reasons cities struggle to stay solvent because too much space is being used for parking instead of other more productive uses such as commercial and residential space.
@DavMovis_ Жыл бұрын
@@taoliu3949 and with good planning you wouldn't feel the need to HAVE to drive, you also have more freedom of cheaper alternatives to driving. Here in the U.S. we're so generationally brainwashed that economically insolvent cities are ingrained in our culture.
@runswithraptors Жыл бұрын
@@DavMovis_ because this nation is too big. Why bother fixing a dying community when the people with money will always up and leave for another town?
@NamelessProducts Жыл бұрын
This video came out in perfect timing. Gainesville FL cracked down hard on their downtown parking and people came out to protest.
@teuast Жыл бұрын
Rare Florida W. Assuming the parking is in fact replaced with something beneficial.
@AssBlasster Жыл бұрын
Lol no surprise from my alma mater. Protesting for street parking SMH. The top issue for students every semester always seem to be on-campus parking, but I liked how the university kept replacing parking lots with new buildings during my time there. I also spent a summer in Fayetteville and found the city had a better urban layout than Gainesville, albeit with the same issues of abundant parking.
@Brent-jj6qi Жыл бұрын
@@teuast Floridias been taking dubs for like 3 years now
@maddog2314 Жыл бұрын
I can only imagine the relief Tallahassee would have if some of these FSU tailgate lots could be converted into businesses or housing. These lots get used about 6-12 days out of the year and are blocked off otherwise. They are within walking/biking distance to campus because they're walking distance to the stadium. Density is increasing but could be better.
@420Nate Жыл бұрын
Former mayor Sarah Marsh’s statement about having to move your car every time you go to a different shop really resonates with me. I can stand having to do that! Fantastic video!
@DFPercush Жыл бұрын
Instead we had Wal Mart come in and market their supercenters as a "one stop shop" and killed off all the local business. Derp.
@taoliu3949 Жыл бұрын
@@DFPercush Walmarts are only possible if the infrastructure is there to support it. That means a huge amount of roads leading out to their supercenters in the middle of nowhere. Many localities desperate for tax revenue will also offer tax incentives to try and get Walmart to move into their area, which does nothing but shoot themselves in the foot.
@eddie9559 Жыл бұрын
@@DFPercush The whole downtown/city can be a one-stop shop.
@DanDanDoe Жыл бұрын
I'm from Utrecht, the Netherlands, and the downtown area is of course very dense. I would often just park my bike on the edge and walk to the shops. I can't imagine having to use a car to do basic grocery shopping, buy some clothes etc. The only places I'd grab a car for are large hardware and furniture stores.
@mpetersen6 Жыл бұрын
It has always puzzled me why people would complain about going to a commercial shopping/entertainment district and complain about walking. But then go to a shopping mall. Park once and walk all over the damn mall. Personally if a district has to have parking it needs to be in a parking structure. Preferably municipal owned with rates that are not outrageous. And any multi unit residential building should be required to provide one space per unit within the footprint of the building. Unless the building is in a car free zone.
@themurdernerd Жыл бұрын
Fayettevillian here! I'm so proud we're making this progress! This is my hood that you're featuring here. I live right downtown, and yes, it is a super cool place to live, but we still need to work on getting better walking and bike infrastructure on the South side of town, which is where more poor people live, but I'm working on it! Thanks again for featuring my hometown!
@LimitedWard Жыл бұрын
Keep on fighting the good fight! It may take longer than expected, but if you keep it up you'll be the envy of your state in no time!
@GreenishlyGreen Жыл бұрын
As a fellow wild hog, I must concur. Wps
@MonkeyMan01 Жыл бұрын
As a resident of Texarkana, I'm so glad its problems were showcased in this video. After a trip to the Uk, I fell in love with the 'walkable city' and couldn't help but notice how inhospitable towns here in the Us are to that ideal. I'll be moving out of state soon because like many before me, I've realized there's nothing here in the way of opportunity.
@TheWolfXCIX Жыл бұрын
Where abouts in the UK did you go? We've got some lovely walkable cities but also some pretty car centric ones too
@johns.8220 Жыл бұрын
@@TheWolfXCIX Which cities in the UK are the most/least walkable in your opinion?
@TheWolfXCIX Жыл бұрын
@@johns.8220 Most of them are at least decent: the best I've been to being York, Cambridge and London. The worst is Milton Keynes by quite a distance, and Leeds is also fairly poor outside of the very centre.
@hockeymaskbob2942 Жыл бұрын
Texarkana has one of the most beautiful old historic downtown train stations in the area, sadly it's being left unused to rot away slowly
@fernthaisetthawatkul5569 Жыл бұрын
i noticed the UK has a rail system that makes it pretty easy and efficient to get to smaller towns from big cities like london, which is what the US severely lacks. so i am absolutely gobsmacked to see headlines in the british media about increasing car dependency! sunak and his administration inherited a precious gift and it seems he wants to throw it in the bin 😐
@tristianwhitney2400 Жыл бұрын
Ireland has an issue with car-centric planning, like too many other countries. So glad to see the rising urbanism movement
@TheUntypicals Жыл бұрын
It's a disease they imported from the USA and the UK
@timharbert7145 Жыл бұрын
Yes. Walk around your city. So many people to run into and places to discover. Get lost intentionally...say hi to the local businesses.
@Arclite02 Жыл бұрын
24 kilometers one way, in -30 degree freezing cold, with a pretty good chance of getting stabbed in at least 3 sections of that walk... Yeah, I'm good. No thanks.
@SilverDragonJay Жыл бұрын
Love seeing that Strong Towns is making their own videos now. I learned about you guys from Not Just Bikes, the guy who opened my eyes to what life could be like. I have become obnoxious with my advocacy for walkability and it has only gotten worse now that I live on a very walkable college campus and have had direct experience with how nice it is being able to walk ten minutes to the grocery store. I have walked to the grocery store _just_ to buy a single donut. I never did that back home when I had access to a car, I would just sit around and whine about how much I wanted a donut but couldn't be bothered to go get one (despite the fact that the drive to the grocery store was only ten minutes; it just felt like such a hassle to deal with the car, traffic, and parking). I have also learned just how convenient it is having a bus that comes by every 15 minutes. Better then being stranded in an area for an hour (on the weekend at that) because you missed the last bus and now you have to wait for it (the only bus on a very long route) to do a full lap and come back to get you. I'm going to miss this area when I graduate and have to move back home. And I'll have to move back home, walkable college towns are expensive to live in because a lot of people also want to live there (and a lot _have_ to live there, of course).
@unsafevelocities5687 Жыл бұрын
9:56 What Sarah Marsh says about down town(s) being a "park once" district reminds me of my parents. They do this all the time and it's always annoyed me. While in recent years my dad can be excused due to decreasing mobility from an old injury, that hasn't always been the case. I remember, years ago, getting in the car so we can move it across a main road, from one part of the same carpark to another on the other side of a shopping centre, from one street in a vacation town to another (a few hundred metres apart!), from a motel to a side street _slightly_ closer to a cafe, I think more than once the car has been moved so the air-con could be used because "it was too hot to walk", etc., etc. I think I was a teenager when during a particularly egregious example I first asked, "Why don't we just walk?" I got a sheepish response along lines of that we probably should, but . Whatever the excuse was it wasn't worth remembering. I think a further point about public transit can be made here. No city centre is too small for a tram/streetcar so that people can park nearby and get everywhere. I know this is borderline impossible in the US for political reasons.
@Joesolo13 Жыл бұрын
My family has a rather egregious example they would do all too often. We live in an older, somewhat walkable suburb. There's a restaurant we'd often eat at for Birthdays or other celebrations all of 900 feet from our house. Despite this, we'd almost always "have to" pile in the cars. Even as a Kid I realized this was absurd and sometimes was able to convince everyone to walk, usually only if the weather was just about perfect, but others times I'd get yelled at just for wanting to on my own. Even though by the time everyone actually got in the cars you could be a third of the way there on foot, and parking was often a struggle. With my friends, unless they were driving from across town, we'd always walk. Though I did bike once when I was running late.
@unsafevelocities5687 Жыл бұрын
@@Joesolo13 Ha! Yep, this sounds very familiar. There are two streets out of my neighbourhood and one of them has a small group of eateries and other businesses along the main road. It would be about 900 feet from home and we have absolutely driven to restaurants there for celebrations. I've never been yelled at for walking, but when I was I think early teens I remember I got some funny looks when I said I was going for a walk around this small, holiday town we were staying at one morning. The looks weren't about it being dangerous, but more like why on Earth would I want to do that. The town is smaller than our neighbourhood back in the suburbs and I don't think they quite realised that. I mean, I walked around the entire town in maybe three-quarters of an hour. Came back and they were finally ready to go somewhere so, of course, we got in the car and went somewhere I passed in the first minutes of the walk. lol I've never really thought about it before, but my best friend and I went everywhere by bicycle when I was a primary (elementary) school kid. I wonder if that's why you and I see our suburbs differently to the previous generation, because growing up we had to find alternate means of getting about without a car whereas the previous generation moved there with cars so just kept driving everywhere?
@girllittlemorbid9 ай бұрын
As a disabled person who has a lot of difficulty walking- I hate when people use me as an excuse for why there has to be soo much parking right in front of every destination. Trust me- having to cross giant stroads & sprawling parking lots to get everywhere is much more dangerous & inconvenient. And adding an insane of distance for pedestrians to walk so that drivers never have to walk half a block when it's busy or pay for parking.
@FlyingOverTr0ut Жыл бұрын
LA's slowly making progress. Several pro-transit, progressive city council members just got elected here in LA, and there are lots of transit/metro expansions planned (many of them decades from now, though) and more people/bike friendly street proposals. Hopefully we get there more quickly.
@LimitedWard Жыл бұрын
Yeah I was surprised to learn they just got funding for light rail down Van Nuys Blvd! That street (stroad?) is so insanely wide I always questioned what they were thinking when making it. I'm praying they narrow it down and add protected bike lanes as well. That neighborhood deserves better.
@technomad9071 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂 your joking I was there is nothing
@cheef825 Жыл бұрын
One thing im proud of in Seattle is the sheer quantity of quality bike infrastructure that has spawned up around the city in the last decade
@lucadipaolo1997 Жыл бұрын
@@LimitedWard There are streets in Italy where you have 1~3 lanes of "express" traffic in the middle, another lane with a tram, and then another segregated local only road on the sides; these local streets often feature some on-street parking while some have bike lanes. I think some stroads in LA would work really well with a system like that. A good example of that is Corso Regina Margherita, in Turin.
@victorcapel2755 Жыл бұрын
What confused me a bit in LA was the waiting times for the subway and trams. Granted, it was a weekend, but still I had to wait almost 30 minutes for a train from Civic Central/Grand park going south. That's night time trafic in my home town, a metro in the city center would have a train coming in every 3-5 minutes daytime, even on weekends.
@iamian6673 Жыл бұрын
Production value off the charts! Thanks for putting so much love and effort into these videos. More people need to know about Strong Towns
@calebfox3108 Жыл бұрын
There are plenty of great urbanist voices on KZbin, but I really appreciate how you focus on the stories of real towns, businesses, and people. If we want this movement to gain traction, we need to ensure our messaging is relatable, practical, and grounded. Great video!
@willblasingame6441 Жыл бұрын
I went to the University of Arkansas.. this makes me miss Fayetteville so much! I loved it there, it had such a sense of community
@strongtowns Жыл бұрын
It's a really great place.
@themurdernerd Жыл бұрын
WPS!🐗
@machinismus Жыл бұрын
It looks like a gorgeous city!
@Korina42 Жыл бұрын
@@strongtowns Are you folks familiar with Cathy Tuttle's Downtown Portland Car Master Plan? It's pretty awesome.
@davidkempton5694 Жыл бұрын
9:55 What a culture shock! It is insane to me as a British person (and we're more car dependant than Europe generally) that you would go into a city centre and drive between each place you want to visit. The idea that you would have to fight to get people to only park once is just alien to me.
@Descriptor413 Жыл бұрын
Usually what really ends up happening is that, instead of going to multiple places, people just go to Wal-mart and get everything in one place. That's why those proliferated so much in America, since it really leans into the car dependence. When you drive, people don't like to make more than one stop. So they don't. And thus, in a car-dependent society, small businesses suffer.
@LIamaLlama554 Жыл бұрын
Wow, very well done @strongtowns! Of course the fewer surface lots a place has, the more walkable it becomes, thus lessening the need for parking. It’s a beautiful upward spiral to walkable, desirable, thriving places!
@Meyers1793 Жыл бұрын
I really love that the innovative step of removing parking minimums was taken by... Fayetteville, Arkansas. It shows that ANY town or city can take steps to reduce car dependence. I look forward to hearing how Fayetteville has changed in a few years.
@gabetalks9275 Жыл бұрын
This videos need to be played in classrooms all across America. Most of us don't realize just how critical urban planning is to the success of our nation, the well being of the public, and sustainability. It has a much larger impact on how we live our lives than most of us ever notice.
@nathonizamboni875 Жыл бұрын
Just walking around is huge. It is so much easier to incrementally improve a place when people are walking around rather than driving. Case in point (bear with me) the amusement park I work at requires area supervisors and up to do "park walks" and take notes on the things they notice. Every year a few of those things are improved in addition to whatever big thing they are adding. Also by forcing management to walk around the place they have a strong incentive to make it a nice place to be. This incremental improvement is slow, but they've been doing it for over a decade now and it shows. This amusement park (Kings Island) is generally considered to have the best "vibes" out of all of the parks in the midwest. Nothing good happens fast imo. The best kind of places are ones that have been slowly and steadily improving over a long time. Each little thing is just a drop in the pond, but together they add up.
@HallsofAsgard96 Жыл бұрын
"Rome wasn't built in a day" as they say
@jasonreed7522 Жыл бұрын
Making supervisors do "park walks" would be great if applied to cities. Make city council do "city walks" and "transit trips" so they get first hand experience at what needs to be fixed and the actual impacts of their policies. The hard part is actually finding a way to force city council & the mayor to actually do these.
@yellowlynx Жыл бұрын
Rebuild a lively downtown, loosen zoning so that one-family houses and multiple household residential blocks (like duplexes or smaller blocks) can coexist, improve public transport so that young people can hang out easily, working people don't have to own a car and get more rests.
@lincolnreynolds4874 Жыл бұрын
As an alumnus of UARK, I just want to say this video literally hit home. I love Fayetteville and my time spent there, and a lot of the great things in this video happened or started happening while I was there - if only I had recognized the value then instead of retroactively! It was nice to see a city official say that the new parking deck downtown was a "capitulation" and not something to be proud of - because, unfortunately, one of Fayetteville's most beloved local coffee shops (Arsaga's at the Depot) had to be torn down for the garage's construction, and I remember myself and all of my friends being incredibly upset. Fantastic video, once agian. Woo Pig Sooie!
@samueldrazkowski2908 Жыл бұрын
Remove minimums, build a few public ramps spread through downtown, they build ones with first floor commercial space and brick facades that don't look bad
@rangersmith4652 Жыл бұрын
It has taken me a long time to realize this, but free car parking _always_ = ruin. In any city. That's especially true if it's government mandated free parking. Like most government mandates, parking minimums laws create a phenomenally inefficient use of space and squash development. As I noted, I never realized until recently that such laws are so prevalent.
@LoboLakerGaming Жыл бұрын
As a graduate of the University of Arkansas, I loved the downtown area. I didn’t even realize the lack of parking minimums. Tbh - it was hard to find parking sometimes. It encouraged us to walk, or to carpool whenever possible. Instead of a group of people all taking 3-4 cars, we carpooled in 2. The pedestrians on Dickson Street and the Square Fri/Sat nights often kept cars away on their own - because the streets could be flooded with pedestrians. It was neat.
@libprime_ Жыл бұрын
I've lived in Fayetteville for about 5 years now, thank you for talking about this wonderful city! From my personal experience, any time I go downtown I've never had trouble finding a place to park. The climate is nice and we have a few parking garages around the downtown area, and I have never seen them be more than half full, and I think what helps us the fact that the downtown area is so densely packed that you can pretty much park in the middle of it and walk anywhere. There are no massive parking lots to pad out the space between businesses, and you can really notice the difference that makes. Another thing that helps a lot is the fact that we have decent public transit. The downtown area is right next to the university, and our bus system (while not perfect)b is completely free.
@katarn999 Жыл бұрын
Parking lots are one of the things I never understood whenever I visited the US - they always looked like wasted space in many downtown areas, stretching them out to the point where there was actually no "downtown" at all. Good to see that efforts are being taken to improve that, at least in Fayetteville! PS: Now start planning for e.g. a local tram-line... work's never over! 😉
@adriangee4272 Жыл бұрын
So glad we as a society are realizing the impact of over-reaching and ridiculous rules.
@harvey66616 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn't get your hopes up too much yet. This is one rule, and only being overturned in limited jurisdictions. But yes, at least it's a baby step in the right direction. Let's just hope, speaking of babies, that we don't throw that baby out with the bath water.
@PopcornColonelx Жыл бұрын
America’s zoning is absolutely ridiculous. Especially Single-family home zoning.
@WillmobilePlus Жыл бұрын
You mean that wacky idea of people not living a$$ to face with their neighbors? How WEIRD!!!!!!!!!!!?!?!?!?!?!?! I cant even open the curtains in my bathroom because it faces straight into the window of the people next door's bedroom. Privacy actually matters to some of us.
@danielkelly2210 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, fortunately, this is changing, whether some holdouts like it or not.
@WillmobilePlus Жыл бұрын
@Oak Island Pictures >Like with parking minimums, this issue often gets straw-manned into “they want to bulldoze all the Craftsmans and put us in commie block apartments” There is no "strawman". People like that openly say they despise single family homes and consider the people that live there to be "parasites". That's actually a words used by some dude on Twitter regarding zoning I just read today.
@PopcornColonelx Жыл бұрын
@@WillmobilePlus you can choose to live somewhere far away from others if you want. It’s just insane to make illegal to have a store or cafe within walking distance due to single family zoning.
@Fronken89 Жыл бұрын
As a European it's honestly amazing to see any form of progress being done over in the US. Even with it being extremely slow and hard fought, something is happening. Still so many things left to go, but something is happening. Good on ya.
@nirad8026 Жыл бұрын
I'm just worried that in the true American fashion, they're gonna screw this up just like they screwed up their cities half a century ago. I see too many people who watched Not just bikes and decided that every city can and must be like Amsterdam, except with a full ban on cars and almost utopian public transport. These people fail to realize that a balance is necessary and real problems need to be solved that aren't of ideological nature. Ok, sure, the "car-centric" concepts don't work all the time. Expanding highways just doesn't lead anywhere. Excess parking space destroys the urban fabric and people lose sense of the city atmosphere. But just saying "this, except totally opposite" is not the solution. There are problems that emerge with every solution - that is why transportation and urbanism actual academic skill. No solution is panacea, nor is every city the same. These real problems impact regular folks who are supposed to live there. Building entire parking blocks has a different negative effect to public transport that is non-stop overcrowded, smelly, filled with crime and crazy folks. All in all, balance ought to be achieved - I doubt Americans are able to make compromises as they see the world in black and white, very ideologically. Like "good vs evil". Good being walkable cities, bad being evil cars. Logical solution is to just create one massive pedestrian zone. Except even us in Europe see that sometimes, even in the densest city cores, pedestrian areas will sometimes be avoided by people as they aren't practical or charming, maybe even unsafe. Or on the contrary, lead to other problems like overcrowding, apartment prices through the roof, many foreign expats taking away the essence of the city, essentially soulless city center.
@Eggmancan Жыл бұрын
Hey, I've got family in Fayetteville, but I haven't been there in 20 years so I'm surprised to see some of the changes. Parking mins are one of the easiest things to change to help bring density and vibrancy to a city, so I hope more consider it. Hopefully this low hanging fruit gives communities in the US an appetite for some of the harder things, like zoning law changes and public transit.
@HerveMaas Жыл бұрын
As a Dutch viewer from a similarly sized city living in a suburb 6km from downtown. I cannot imagine a situation where I would drive to every destination. It sounds like such a chore. Park the car, do the first thing. Pick up the car, drive to where thing 2 is, park the car, do thing 2. Pick up the car, drive to thing 3, park the car, do thing 3. The car feels like an extra person you need to work with and is very demanding
@NeSeeger Жыл бұрын
If you do all your shopping on the same day its not bad at all.
@taoliu3949 Жыл бұрын
@@NeSeeger It kinda still is if you want to do window shopping. If I park my car and walk down a street to do shopping, I still have to walk back to retrieve it. I don't have the option of just walking down the street and going straight home or my next destination. I have to constantly retrieve my car and drive to my next destination, find parking, rinse and repeat. You lose a lot of flexibility because the car ends up becoming a liability.
@NeSeeger Жыл бұрын
@@taoliu3949 It is a shame the Mall has been killed
@taoliu3949 Жыл бұрын
@@NeSeeger It wasn't "killed", it was never viable to begin with.
@NeSeeger Жыл бұрын
@@taoliu3949 Not everyone lives in a city, or wants to.
@zyxwut321 Жыл бұрын
Keep fighting the good fight. A lot of this is generational. Nobody I know under the age of 30-35 has ANY problems with walkable development and limiting parking, even those with small children. People older than that mostly grew up in sprawled out environments and often have a hard time imagining outside of the right to endless free parking at their immediate destinations.
@enjoyslearningandtravel7957 Жыл бұрын
It’s not all generation I’m over 35 and I believe in a walkable development in limited parking. !!
@zyxwut321 Жыл бұрын
@@enjoyslearningandtravel7957 Awesome, me too! :) No, obviously it's not ENTIRELY generational but it definitely is part of the problem. I'm in my 40s and most of my friends around my age are in the suburban stage of life where they're carting their kids around to soccer and lacrosse practice and feel like they have no other choice but to live in their sprawled out suburban subdivisions and drive their oversized SUVs.
@dchevron77 Жыл бұрын
The park once concept is very interesting. Never thought about it this way but it makes so much sense
@taoliu3949 Жыл бұрын
It's basically parking garages. Historically this was the preferred way for building parking in cities before parking minimums became a thing.
@ChopsTV Жыл бұрын
I live in Little Rock, AR (bout 3 hours down the highway) and parking minimums are my favorite soapbox. I'll beat this drum till I die. Go to any big box store or strip mall on Black Friday and you'll still see dozens, if not hundreds, of empty parking spaces. Its absolutely heartbreaking once you start noticing just how much of any city is eaten up with parking spots nobody ever uses.
@qrzupsjohnson707 Жыл бұрын
Removing parking minimums is an excellent first step. From a libertarian perspective, who the heck are local officials to mandate how many parking spaces are required at my property?
@shingshongshamalama8 ай бұрын
Rule of thumb: your parking should not take up more square footage real estate than the actual business.
@Descriptor413 Жыл бұрын
Man, the editing just gets fancier and fancier!
@amiddled Жыл бұрын
Why the editing specifically? I was more impressed with lighting, camera work, inset infographics etc. Interesting to know why how the video has been edited down is your focus on this one?
@Descriptor413 Жыл бұрын
@@amiddled I apologize, I was using the colloquial definition of editing to refer to the entire cinematography process. Plus, I made the comment just based on the release trailer from a few days ago, so I haven't had a chance to comment on the actual full video. I just wanted to build hype and mostly juice the algorithm a bit through early commenting.
@handsfortoothpicks Жыл бұрын
Trust me just one more lane please just one more lane and it'll all be okay
@peterslegers6121 Жыл бұрын
OK. Can do! Let's get rid of one car lane, and put in 2 separated bicycle lanes on either side of the street. That's one lane more!
@mollysullivan1533 Жыл бұрын
The quality of this video is insane! Excited to see more content from y’all!
@93limabean Жыл бұрын
All my favorite places in my city are literally illegal to build now because of parking minimums
@seanrea550 Жыл бұрын
Removing parking minimums should be paired off with more robust transit programs and making sustainable suburbs so that even in the suburbs you can reliably get in to the city by public transit in a reasonable amount of time. In the case of large parking structures, if they are tied to a location (a stadium/theater or the like lat has limited peak times, open the parking structures to common parking in the down time. For the times around planned events the parking can be arranged so that it is reserved for the event.
@taoliu3949 Жыл бұрын
Yes and no. Improving transit system is good, but not necessary to allow outsiders to visit the city. Eliminating parking minimums allows developers to "right size" the amount of parking according to demand. In Buffalo for example, developers still build parking in the downtown area, but it tends to be shared rather than single use.
@wdauchy Жыл бұрын
Incredible how late some cities are on this subject. There are numerous examples in the world showing how different life can be. Nice to see the change happening in the US.
@harvey66616 Жыл бұрын
Not that this is a defense of US cities, but it's helpful to remember that the bulk of the issues in the US exist because the wrong people have the most influence. Your average citizen never would have chosen to bankrupt cities by restricting downtown development and chasing the Ponzi scheme that is suburbia. But developers _love_ this setup. They can turn a buck a lot faster building sprawl than dealing with the challenges of building in an already-developed and dense environment. Likewise big corporations who need to be able to build at scale to leverage their advantages over mom-and-pop stores. I'm just glad to see that individual citizens are starting to wake up to these issues and take back what was always rightfully theirs in the first place.
@DameClemency Жыл бұрын
It's interesting to see a U.S. town that recognizes the significance of walkable streets and nuanced cityscape. I hope Fayetteville's pursuit for these things is successful, and if so I hope that more cities follow suite.
@MozyOnIn Жыл бұрын
This is a banger. Keep em coming guys!
@VitalyGutkovich Жыл бұрын
This looks amazing! So excited!!!
@bradenhazle4378 Жыл бұрын
Another stunning video Mike! Keep these going! But regarding Fayetteville, you touched on the issue of removing parking in a place where most people live farther away. And that's where city officials have to both work on zoning AND public transit.
@jamesfrancis8958 Жыл бұрын
I was lucky enough to visit Fayetteville with my partner back in 2018. I remember feeling jealous that the U of A's "collegetown" area was so much more pleasant, walkable, and natural feeling as opposed to our University's "collegetown" which seemed too sterile, empty, and forced. I realize now a part of that is because our "collegetown" was littered with (required) on and off street parking and felt very disconnected from the rest of the city/anything that students would actually be interested in going to. Granted it's got nice wide sidewalks, but there's also a 5 lane roadway going right though it so despite how much it tries to be a friendly and walkable space, it's got a long ways to go.
@mpetersen6 Жыл бұрын
Locally we have the city trying to revitalize the downtown distict for decades. Finally aound 2000 they city council finally got the message that the future of downtown was multi unit residential and entertainment. Plans were announced. Some projects started and then the housing bubble burst. Its been a slog but things are getting back on track. Saddly the one thing lacking is a decent market for groceries. Over the years too many stores opened only to fail.
@thomaskilloy2534 Жыл бұрын
Strong Towns is really making the world a better place.
@smallstudiodesign Жыл бұрын
It’s interesting how the suburbanites, who don’t actually pay for their share towards certain infrastructure (ie. parking) are the most entitled and demanding of said infrastructure … which they won’t use daily but only occasionally or seldomly at best.
@filescopying Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this! I shared this with my old neighborhood association that believed every apartment needs at least 2 parking spaces.
@stevemiller7949 Жыл бұрын
Strong Towns has really gone Hollywood with this new level of videos --------- and I love it!!!!! Anything that makes this information more compelling and memorable is a great thing. For those that haven"t heard, we are dealing with (or not) a climate crisis. We need to live with a lower carbon footprint and spacing cities out with excess unnecessary parking lots is the exact opposite of what is needed. Thank you Strong Towns!!! 🙂🙂🙂❤❤💯
@waveman1500 Жыл бұрын
When I first heard about parking minimum laws in the USA, I was shocked. In Australia, we tend to have minimum parking rules for apartment buildings, not small businesses.
@hesham8 Жыл бұрын
I feel this way about Brooklyn. Where we have parking minimums for medium density housing - 1 parking spot per 4 apartments, up to 1 per 1.5. It’s maddening to see new medium density housing (meaning, 7 floors or less, less than 100 units) being built and to have 1-2 floors of that space devoted to parking. Or the entire outdoor area behind the building devoted to parking.
@LisaBeergutHolst Жыл бұрын
Even with no parking minimums in downtown Portland, some landlords are banking acres of land via surface parking. A *_tax_* on parking lots would be good too.
@mariusfacktor3597 Жыл бұрын
11:29 to 14:25 I really love hearing this guy talk. Moving stuff. Ya'll should get him on the Strong Towns Podcast.
@JV-pu8kx Жыл бұрын
Another option depends on how big the city blocks are. Put the businesses along the periphery, and parking lot in the center. Or even a parking garage, above or below ground. I can tell you these options do work. My town has made use of the first option. The businesses are walkable from the street and there is ample off-street parking for employees and residents of the second floor apartments. My nearest city has ground-level, walkable commercial spaces carved out of the side of two parking garages.
@doomcat6426 Жыл бұрын
I am so excited to see where this channel goes in the future
@fallenshallrise Жыл бұрын
This video is so positive... but these people who want to live out on farmland where the houses are cheap, then drive into town and be given a free or nearly free parking spot right in front of the 3 places they want to go on Saturday get on my nerves. Meanwhile I can't find a secure place to lock a bike half the time.
@contrapunctusmammalia3993 Жыл бұрын
The idea that you would drive to each individual errand or activity you're doing in a city centre is kinda making my head spin, but has really helped me understand the challenges facing American urbanism in a way that just clicks. I'm now imagining any local highstreet I've seen but with every establishment forced to have its own parking and that really would dessimate a city centre
@WillmobilePlus Жыл бұрын
>The idea that you would drive to each individual errand or activity you're doing in a city centre is kinda making my head spin, So? The idea of having to take 4X as long to do the same thing, because you have to wait for trains or busses, and then lots of times have no place to sit, is utterly barbaric to us.
@contrapunctusmammalia3993 Жыл бұрын
@MW Mobile growing up in the UK, it was most common that you would live in the suburbs and drive into to (down)town and park at one of 2 or 3 multistory carparks on the edge of the city centre. I lived in a farely small city so you could walk from one end to the other in about 25mins to give a sense of scale. But that area was filled with hundreds of restaurants, shops and other establishments down narrow pedestrianised streets. If every single one of those had to provide it's own parking then the surface area of that city space has to massively increase and all the properties are flung far away from each other seperated by a sea of tarmac from surface parking and arterial highway to get all those cars there. Yes, it would take 4x longer to walk between places Precisely Because of the obsession with driving. If no one was driving between shops but instead walking between them, then you could build things in walking distance with each other.
@danielkelly2210 Жыл бұрын
Takes way longer to accomplish things having to drive everywhere. Car dependency is the worst.
@WillmobilePlus Жыл бұрын
@@contrapunctusmammalia3993 Well, ok, an small English village/city that is a 25 minute walk from end to end is not comparable to even a mid-size midwestern city that isnt some sprawled-out trope that foreigners tend to get from these types of channels. It would take me 25 minutes to walk from my home to where my wife works and there would still be miles of city to walk through to get to the edge and all of that would be blocks of homes and businesses, with not even one stroad. It certainly isn't this goofy stereotype of " flung far away from each other separated by a sea of tarmac from surface parking" >If no one was driving between shops but instead walking between them, then you could build things in walking distance with each other And how many homes to you want to see demolished for that purpose if no one was driving? Sorry that you don't like driving, but that is your personal choice, not a statement that people that visit places that just aren't located where they live are "doing it wrong". Our cities weren't created in 1433, so the configuration and growth reflect that, and arent the result of people being "stupid". Your quaint small town can make "pedestrianized streets in the narrow width of your 500 year old roads, but that isnt a pratical thing in cities made during 1800s pioneer days. I live in an area that is economically higher income + surrounded by multiple "high streets". 99% of the places are boutique stores and restaurants, with no space to ram in everyplace else you would want to go "within walking distance". So if you want to get certain things, it just makes more efficient sense to drive. And no we are not "stuck" in bottleneck traffic for hours like these channels like to pretend. h3ll, I can get to my parents house in the next county and 4 cities over, in 20 minutes outside of rush hour, and that is 13-19 miles away.
@contrapunctusmammalia3993 Жыл бұрын
@@WillmobilePlus Perhaps I wasn't clear, 25 minutes is the diameter of the city centre area. (My hometown is Norwich if you want to have a look yourself.) The full urban sprawl of Norwich is about 20 sq miles and home to 200k people. Fayetteville, AR in the video has an urban sprawl of 55 sq mi and a population of 98k, that's about half the population of Norwich at over double the surface area and this before we get into metro areas. Maybe in your estimation, Fayetteville isn't a "mid-sized midwestern city" that Norwich "is not even comparable to", but it is the focus of the video (and therefore what my comment is reacting to). And being the second largest city in all of Arkansas has got to count for something. The sea of tarmac from surface parking is in reflection to the downtown areas depicted in this video (about 04:06-04:11), lots of businesses separated by their own individual parking spaces. The council in this video stopped the requirement to provide parking provision for every lot or business and bit by bit they are filling in the gaps of a decimated downtown. Moving towards this kind of high-street layout would demolish literally nobody's home because no one lives in a fucking car park. That's what this video is about, filling in the downtown area to make a dense and walkable district (as the councillor says at 09:56), we're not even talking about public transport, we're talking about driving to a multi-storey carpark and then walking for like 15 minutes - less probably. It's not just my personal sentiment against driving though, car culture is horrendously destructive in many ways including: climate breakdown caused by pollution in connection to construction and usage of cars (EVs don't get a pass), infrastructure cost (massive roads are very expensive to maintain), personal finance, personal wellbeing, municipal finance, social cohesion and stability, and just general efficiency of moving people around. "Cities made during the 1800s". You're right, almost all American settlements predate the 1900s - which means they predate the use and even invention of the car in the first place. American towns and cities looked completely comparable to European cities before the age of car domination which is pretty much a post-war invention. They had dense downtown areas and streetcar systems (creating streetcar suburbs) were very common, and there were many many more railways across the country as a whole and in urban areas as suburban rail and metro systems. Some might say that the populations were much smaller back then so it would never work today. To that I say, look to the European or even East Coast of American examples. America chose (because of the lobbying of oil companies and car manufacturers) to focus city growth on a car-centric model and they could have chosen to focus on walkability and public transport. The Netherlands also went down a car-centric way post-war but reverted it from the 1980s or so. That's all an aside though and I'm gonna guess you won't appreciate such politicised language. The point is, Norwich - "quaint small town" as it may be - has a higher population than the 2cnd largest city in Arkansas. This is because of density of downtown districts and the surrounding housing areas. Even though the downtown is dense it does not give a feel like thundering metropolis that the word "high-density" often evokes; there are no skyscrapers of even high-rises in Norwich. I looked it up and the highest residential/commecial complex is about 40m tall. The only thing taller is the damn Cathedral.
@Tyxaar Жыл бұрын
I'm from Australia, and although we're bad, omg this is horrific. The idea of having 30+ parking spots for just one resturant is... it's unthinkible.
@livablecity Жыл бұрын
What a remarkable and inspiring video
@aryanadavin8135 Жыл бұрын
So proud to be from Fayetteville right now
@danielcarlino5736 Жыл бұрын
Great video! Now to get rid of parking minimums in Missoula, Montana 😎
@Limosethe Жыл бұрын
As well as everywhere else
@SAmaryllis Жыл бұрын
"Park once" is such a simple and strong statement! What a vision I also loved seeing that flashback to the 2013 interview on "well, maybe I can join the local government" - makes it seem much more approachable :)
@johns.8220 Жыл бұрын
ST, I cannot describe how revelatory your movement has been for me. I always knew something was wrong in my communities but never even knew where to begin until I read "Strong Towns" and "Confessions"...now that I've seen it I can never unsee it. Like Matthew I was never a political or cause-joining kind of guy until now. There's only so much one guy can do but I'll always be behind you. Thank you and keep up the fight.
@andersdenkend Жыл бұрын
It's funny how a lot of people travel to Europe and be like: "Whoa, this is so cute. So great to just walk around. Public transit is good, too!" and then go back home and be like: "There's no parking right infront of the door? How am I supposed to visit this establishment???".
@NoorquackerInd Жыл бұрын
Please tell me you're going to push these videos more. These _really_ are going to push more people to be active in their communities
@elonchan4883 Жыл бұрын
It’s such a trip to see the place I live in a video like this. Fayetteville still has work to do when it comes to public transit but it’s an amazing place! Edit: also, it’s important to mention that Fayetteville is EXPLODING. Which is an opportunity but it’s an opportunity that won’t last forever
@stewarthicks Жыл бұрын
This is so fantastic. Well done
@cragle1114 Жыл бұрын
the average cost of owning a a car in the us is around 10k a year about 20% of median income that's not convenient its a massive expense that most people cannot realistically avoid put just a third of all the money spent on cars into transit, walking and cycling infrastructure you would have a world class transport system that is better for urban environment and save money as 80% of Americans live in urban areas were a car shouldn't be a requirement
@filescopying Жыл бұрын
That's it! I want to live in a city where car ownership is optional.
@RabidAaron Жыл бұрын
This was beautiful. Thank you.
@beardly Жыл бұрын
I just checked and I was happy to see that my city council (Lexington, KY) unanimously approved an ordinance completely eliminating minimum parking requirements. Good stuff.
@jacobott717 Жыл бұрын
Great video and insight to parking minimums. Need to remove all the surface lots in downtown Cleveland!
@hoodedmexican Жыл бұрын
Oh my god when I clicked a Strong Towns video i expected like a three hour podcast and was pleasantly surprised to see this high quality (no offense to the other videos please keep doing those too!!) production with interviews and history and such great info/explanations. I want to help this additional direction I love it so much already!
@lws7394 Жыл бұрын
So Fayettevilles NorthWest Arkansas metro area, at 60km north to south, has grown from 200k in 1990 to 550k in 2023 and is projected to have 1 mln in 2050 ... Time to build a rail transit fast, instead of that congested highway, you'd say ... There are plans for a light rail from north to south , with 2/3 of total pop with 1 mile of the projected line. Fill in most of the expected new0.5 mln inhabitants near that line and you could have a good grid .. there should be enough redundant parking lotsavailable ..
@_Wobblier Жыл бұрын
The video quality is amazing! Thank you strong towns for making these. People need to see this, and get involved.
@music4life813 Жыл бұрын
You guys should check out Historic Downtown Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. It’s maintained a lot of its walkability and frequently shut down the roads to cars for festivals
@castinphotos4251 Жыл бұрын
We live in Fayetteville (and love it), but Bethlehem has always intrigued us!!
@kookamunga24587 ай бұрын
Joni Mitchell was right . Pave paradise and put up a parking lot . My city of Halifax Canada is also gone bonkers lately with parking lots up the Wazoo.
@yabbaguy Жыл бұрын
Fantastically formatted. My quibble is I wish subtitling were consistent (using the CC function or otherwise) or absent, not intermittent like this. Overall, what a great video about a place that I hope continues to improve. Thanks also for pointing us in the right direction on how to start to take action ourselves.
@nickwannn Жыл бұрын
I generally prefer my urbanism videos LESS slick than this but I'm so stoked to see the new editing and presentation bringing in better view counts! Gotta get it through to the people any way that works.
@BoBandits Жыл бұрын
Texarkana looks like the whole town can get personalized parking on each lot…
@RaviS-gj7zp Жыл бұрын
An extremely realistic, authentic reflection, media presentation ... Fairfield, CA County Offices has a chamber entrance sign that says ...'WE ARE THE PEOPLE, YOU & I". Years ago, when I saw that, it made me think differently about our government and about a citizen, tax payer like me. WE need to collectively review and make commonsense changes to codes, laws, and charters to maximize the safety, harmony and peace/welfare of our cities. Nothing is set in stone as many bureaucrats fight us the public, mostly, out of fear of losing their jobs, influence and authority! Let's think about that and spread the wisER word! Thank you for sharing this video.
@StrongTownsNorm Жыл бұрын
After checking out the links in the video description, I'd also recommend checking out the Strong Towns 101 course at academy.strongtowns.org -- It's a free course and thousands of people have gone through it and learned a great deal from it. Section 1: The Insolvency Crisis Facing Our Cities Section 2: How Did This Happen? (Hint: It's not your fault) Section 3: The Strong Towns Approach
@AzuriteCoast Жыл бұрын
Norm - if you post this message again, I'd suggest moving the "free" part of your message earlier. KZbin Mobile has a Show More feature that cuts off the rest of it, and makes it look fishy. Thanks for your work :)
@suiteadditions Жыл бұрын
Many municipalities in our region are eliminating parking for new infill, allowing owners to set parking based on their own market demands.
@londo776 Жыл бұрын
always has been in the UK
@smithydll Жыл бұрын
I'm shocked at how much parking some towns require a dentist to have.
@RemnantCult Жыл бұрын
Fayetteville is one of the few great towns that I like here in Arkansas and I thank you for covering it. It's doing a decent job so far.
@tristanridley1601 Жыл бұрын
Removing parking minimums is one aspect of legalizing urban life. A business should have the option to focus on walking/transit customers. If you're going to have parking minimums at all, they should at least be removed from all areas with good transit and good walkable customer bases.
@jasonreed7522 Жыл бұрын
Yes, if a parking minum is truly mandatory atleast let buisnesses count bike parking spots and seats/capacity on transit services towards their parking minimum to reduce the needed lot size. And at that point just change the name to access minimum considering thats the original intent (ignoring the other intent of making cars more popular for the oil & automotive lobby). Or better yet just get rid of the mandate and let the free market decide considering thats the kind of society we claim to be.
@tristanridley1601 Жыл бұрын
@@jasonreed7522 I agree, but I do see a justification for access minimums. As long as that public access is a limited and shared resource (like street parking), it's vulnerable to the tragedy of the commons. One place that doesn't care can cause congestion that drives the neighbours out of business. Personally, I think the best idea is a complete rework of zoning, based on the ideas that high traffic/access areas can and should have high-traffic uses (like every train/subway station as a mini downtown). Changing parking minimums to access minimums is an idea for a short term compromise solution, since car centric thinking still has the majority of political power.
@jasonreed7522 Жыл бұрын
@@tristanridley1601 the tragedy of the commons is definitely a good example of an externality/market failure to be wary of whenever proposing a true free market solution, so i accept that even if parking/access minimums are removed some sort of regulation will need to exist to prevent a "tragedy of the commons" from happening. As far as a complete zoning rework goes, we definitely need one but i think it will be easier to achieve with small incremental improvements instead of big sweeping changes/reforms. In this vein changing "parking" to "access" is a small change that may not do much on its own but will contribute towards the goal of better cities/towns. Parking minimums are currently out of hand, i used google earth to measure the size of the Walmart parkinglot in my hometown amd its 6 acres just for the customer parking and nothing else, the eastbound reststop on the mass turnpike in Lee has a 0.6 acre lot, almost exactly 1/10 that of a Walmart in objectively the middle of nowhere.
@taoliu3949 Жыл бұрын
@@tristanridley1601 So the government doesn't want to build more parking, therefore they should force private businesses/residences to build it for them? Parking should never have been a "shared resource", it's a convenience for those who drive. If there is a demand for parking, private garages will pop up and take over. Sure, you can build public garages, but they still need to be priced according to demand. On the otherhand, mandating businesses to build their own parking is downright unreasonable. If a business can't survive because of the lack of "cheap parking" provided by the government, then it probably was never sustainable to begin with. People have been building towns and cities without parking minimums for the entire human history. And your concept of "access minimum" doesn't make much sense either. Businesses are not going to infill if they don't think they have the customer base to support their business. If they think they need parking for their customers, they will secure it either by building their own lot or securing spaces with a nearby lot.
@deepbluetree Жыл бұрын
This is so important and a hope for more people friendly downtowns everywhere
@blubaughmr Жыл бұрын
I like the new format! I've wanted to share ST videos online, but they tended to be rather dense and just not very engaging. This approach works a lot better!