99% Invisible - 537- Paved Paradise
Episode Date: May 17, 2023LA might be the most extreme parking city on the planet. Parking regulations have made it nearly impossible to build new affordable housing, or to renovate old buildings. And parking has a massive imp...act on how the city looks. LA is chock full of commercial strip malls, where buildings sit alone and isolated in a sea of asphalt. And all of this is the result of one policy decision that has reshaped American cities for the last eighty years.Henry Grabar's Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World, tells a mesmerizing story about the strange and wonderful super-organism that is the modern American city. In a beguiling and often absurdly hilarious mix of history, politics, and reportage, Grabar brilliantly surveys the pain points of the nation’s parking crisis, from Los Angeles to Disney World to New York, stopping at every major American city in between.Paved  Paradise
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This is 99% invisible.
I'm Roman Mars.
If you have even a passing familiarity with Los Angeles, you've probably heard this before.
In LA, nobody walks.
LA is a city of drivers, a place that feels purpose-built for cars, and to fit all those
cars you need a lot of parking.
It's one of the a lot of parking.
It's one of the greatest concentrations of parking in the world.
That's Henry Grabar, author of a new book called Paved Paradise, How Parking Explanions the World.
I think in LA, parking has a special place in the mind because we think of LA as a sort of an
iconic place to drive with its famous freeways and its palm line boulevards and all that.
So I think it's a place where perhaps you get the highest level of contrast between the kind of
utopian idea of driving and the dirty reality that is looking for a parking spot.
In LA, that dirty reality plays out all the time on the local news.
This are flying in a South LA parking lot and an apparent argument overrun parking space.
The more spectacular ones tend to make the news
if there's a video and you know,
two guys fighting with baseball bats
and somebody runs the car into a storefront.
Like that's gonna make the news,
but I think a lot of run of the mill parking fides don't.
America has as many as eight parking spaces for every car, but despite all of this abundance,
we are constantly fighting with each other about parking.
And most of that fighting happens in rec center basements and city council chambers.
You see people fighting over parking in that context, in, for example, community meetings,
discussions about zoning, about parking requirements, about what gets built in their neighborhood, because everybody is afraid of new residents encroaching
on the parking stock.
And that is a kind of parking fight as well, and perhaps one that has more systemic consequences
than two guys going at it with baseball bats.
LA might be the most extreme parking city on the planet.
Parking regulations have made it nearly impossible to build new affordable housing
or to renovate old buildings.
And parking has a massive impact on how the city looks.
LA is chock full of commercial strip malls,
where buildings sit alone and isolated in a sea of asphalt.
And all of this is the result of one policy decision,
a policy that has reshaped American cities
for the last 80 years.
In the early 20th century, LA saw an influx of new residents, something the city wasn't prepared for.
Well, especially in the 1920s, you know, the population of the city more than doubled in that decade,
you had the most houses built of any time in LA's history.
And you also had a massive growth in car ownership.
Southern California was the first place in the world
with mass ownership of cars.
That's Mark Valleon-Auto's.
He works for the county public transit agency,
but he's also an expert on LA's car culture.
I'm a rare parking weirdo, so I'm happy to talk about it.
In the early 20th century, Los Angeles had the biggest public transit system in the world
by mileage.
Their streetcars and trolleys were well-loved, but thanks to mismanagement and a cultural
shift towards driving and possibly a massive conspiracy by car companies, LA let its trains
fall into disrepair, and they made a choice to become a city of motorists. By 1920, you had one car per household, essentially.
It was like 10 to 12 times as many as in Chicago at that time.
And so therefore, you also had a whole bunch of people figuring out how humans could live
with cars in a city, right?
Garages and car ports and just figuring out where to put the cars.
The shift to becoming a car culture required a lot of changes to the urban landscape.
California had to build highways to accommodate all this driving.
Most parking in LA at the time was curbside, and as the population boomed, street parking
became a rare commodity, which inspired panic at City Hall.
There was an annual report of the Board of LA City Planning Commissioners
that talked about what they'd done the past year, their goals for the next year.
And there's a picture of a sort of empty street
that's just getting developed. There's one apartment building on it.
And it's like a four-story masonry apartment building.
Parked in front of it, we're about maybe 15 to 20 cars.
City planners worried about the consequences
if every new apartment building needed 15 to 20 curbside
parking spaces.
In 1931, LA introduced a policy that
changed how urban planning works in the United States.
They made a law requiring parking minimums
for new residential buildings.
For any new apartment with 20 or more units, there had to be one covered parking spot per
unit.
Here's Henry Grubar.
These parking minimum laws would become virtually ubiquitous in the United States in the second
half of the 20th century.
But in LA at this time, I think you can understand the logic because they're sitting there and
they're saying, we are struggling to create as much parking as possible
both on the part of the city government which is building public parking like the massive
Pershing Square parking garage and also the private you know entrepreneurs and department store owners
themselves who are saying our survival depends upon finding parking.
Well this rule made a lot of sense for a city without mass public transportation.
It also had some gnarly consequences.
Suddenly, lots of apartment buildings in the city
weren't compliant with parking regulations,
which was bad news for one of the city's
most popular building types, the bungalow court.
The classic wonderful Southern California typology.
If you think it's either like two rows of either detached or attached
like small homes on the sides of a long lot? The bungalow court is a lovely housing type.
It was seen as a way for less affluent Angelenos to have a house and a shared private garden,
but the courtyard created an issue. There was no space for the new mandatory parking.
The bungalow courts weren't alone. If developers weren't to build a two or three-story brick
apartment building, they needed to buy the lot next door too,
just for the parking.
People in LA saw the negative consequences
of parking minimums pretty much right away.
Like, even in the early 30s,
the LA Times published article that the parking requirements
essentially made it so no multi-story
masonry buildings were being built anymore in LA.
So very early on, you can see the consequences.
But Los Angeles didn't back off their parking laws.
In fact, they were expanded in the 1940s
because city leaders were facing a looming threat
from the suburbs.
Well, so like most American cities in the 1940s, 50s and 60s,
LA was subject to what planners at the time called decentralization,
which is to say that there were all these booming suburbs on the outskirts
of the city that offered residents from returning GI's coming back from more,
or really anyone else who was white and was able to get a mortgage,
the opportunity to go by a single family home with a front yard and a two car garage and another couple parking spots on the curb in front
of the house.
And that was a very seductive vision for many Americans in the 1940s, 50s and 60s.
Downtown obviously was threatened by people moving out to the suburbs and they wondered,
what can we do to stop ourselves
from losing our population and our tax base
and our jobs to these new suburban communities?
If the city wanted to compete with the growing suburbs,
they needed to fight back against one of the biggest draws
of suburban living, lots and lots of free parking.
Soon, the city's zoning rules included parking minimums
for all types of housing, and then it was expanded to businesses.
So everyone could have cheap and available street parking
when shopping for shoes or getting a meal downtown.
The city's post where 1946's Zoning Code said,
now it's extending to everything.
Industrial buildings, commercial buildings, single-family apartments.
By the 1950s, downtown Los Angeles was an aparque spiral.
The city required more and more parking, which actually incentivized more and more driving,
which created a need for even more parking, and things got out of hand from there.
So over the years, as the parking problem in LA gets worse, they start ramping up the parking requirement.
At first, it's half a parking spot with every unit. Then it's one with every unit.
Then it's two with every unit, and so on.
And you can actually watch developers respond to this
and the kind of dominant form of,
you know, your everyday residential architecture
in Los Angeles evolves.
Face with higher parking requirements,
builders in LA had to get creative,
which led to one of LA's most iconic housing styles.
The dingbat.
You probably heard us talk about dingbats on the show because dingbats are pretty fun,
and the word dingbat is really fun to say.
They have two things a character kind of stuff them apart.
One is the front is often kind of very highly decorated.
The rest of it's very plain stucco, but the front often had like a atomic style, like,
you know, starbursts and really cool tiling. The other distinctive thing about dingbats was tuck under parking. Every
dingbatt apartment was can't a levered over a driveway, so cars could be parked
underneath the building itself. Not everybody loved them, in part because the
underground parking took away a lot of sidewalk space. But for most residents,
dingbats were considered a stylish way to conform with L.A.'s parking requirements.
This was pretty much the most parking-centric housing you could design.
And yet, in 1965, the parking minimums went up again.
Most units of housing required two units of parking, and even dingbats became obsolete.
Yeah, even the dingbat you couldn't build anymore.
And it's true, and you see the dingbat you think, wow, this is the form that has been
developed for a society that's dependent on the automobile for sure.
Eventually, every small and medium residential building type became impossible to construct
in downtown Los Angeles.
The parking minimums created yet another type of housing architecture in the city.
Many new apartment towers had several story parking garages
at the base and the apartments above were shaped
by the needs of the garage below.
Yeah, I talked to some architects who were saying
that the first thing you need to figure out
is how many parking spaces you can get in there.
You need to maximize your number of parking spaces
so that you can maximize your number of units above.
And to maximize that, you require placing these pillars
at certain places in the parking garage, right?
And then that's the form of your building.
It's been determined by the placement
of those pillars in the parking garage.
And so that ends up shaping the design of the units above.
And it's sort of, it's a neat allegory
for how parking drives the design
of other things in society. By the turn of the 21st century, it's a neat allegory for how parking drives the design of other things in society.
By the turn of the 21st century, there was a boom in these mishapen apartment towers
with massive parking garages at the bottom, because the parking math was so complicated for smaller building types.
So if you're building a condo, for example, in Los Angeles in the 1990s. You need to include 2.25 to 2.5 covered on-site parking spaces for every unit.
So let's do the math on this Roman.
You're a developer in a Los Angeles neighborhood and you have a small parcel you inherited
from your grandfather and it's a blank lot and you'd like to put some housing on this
lot, help to solve your city's housing crisis.
If you wanna build five units,
you are required to include five times 2.5,
12.5, and then round up 13 parking spaces.
13 parking spaces on an infill lot,
you can't fit those on the ground floor.
So now you're talking about a two-story garage, or potentially an extremely
expensive underground excavation, just to put five condos on this lot. And five is not a large
number, that's the size of your average sort of infill brownstone on the Upper West side. And suddenly
that kind of construction becomes completely impossible. Because of both the geometry of putting those
parking spaces on the small lot, and both the geometry of putting those parking spaces
on the small lot and also the cost
because building parking is very expensive.
But Lausy new buildings
weren't the only consequence of parking requirements.
Most of LA's old buildings
couldn't be converted into something new.
There are some historic structures here
that many people drive by and they say,
gosh, that would be just perfect
for a little restaurant or a little coffee shop or what have you.
And then they realize that building was built before 1950.
It has no parking or it has two or three parking spaces.
And so there's a padlock around it, a metaphorical padlock.
But to some extent, it, you know, renovating it and turning it into a new thing would require
demolishing something adjacent in order to provide the parking.
Mark Vallionato says all this parking in LA
is a big contributor to the city's housing crisis.
Because of parking minimums,
new housing is very difficult to build,
and many places that could be turned in the housing
are set aside for parking lots.
And the ultimate result to that is essentially
we have 40,000 people homeless, right?
So in the streets of Los Angeles, because you made it impossible to provide homes for people
again because we're prioritizing space for automobiles.
Parking minimums have led to all these problems that are really hard to unwind.
In an LA, it can feel hard to eliminate parking since the city doesn't offer many alternatives
to driving. But recently, LA has taken steps to fight back against its parking culture.
In 1999, the city passed an adaptive reuse ordinance, or ARO. The law made it easier for developers
to convert old office buildings into housing to get more people living downtown.
Developers didn't want to buy these buildings since they had the dreaded parking padlock
on them.
So to make conversions more enticing for developers, the city did something kind of radical.
It waived parking minimums for these conversion projects.
Right.
So basically, you have these developers who start snatching up these buildings.
And these buildings are, at this point, all but worthless.
I mean, we're talking about like people buying 12 store buildings for hundreds of thousands
of dollars, right?
They're super cheap because they have the parking padlock on the front door.
Just say like, they're empty and you can't do anything with them.
You can't turn them into something new because they don't have enough parking.
And so once the city gets rid of this obligation, developers start buying them and they start
turning them into new residential units just about immediately.
So according to the landmark study of the ARO by a planning professor named Michael Manville
who's at UCLA, he went and interviewed all these developers. And he found that between 1999 and 2008,
this is basically 10-year period.
Developers use this ordinance to create
6,900 units in downtown LA.
So almost 7,000 new apartments were built at this time.
And the craziest thing is that the ARRO created more housing
in those 10 years than had been built period in the
previous 30.
I think that's part of what you feel in downtown LA is like a sense that it's a real
neighborhood now.
It's not just an office district that closes at 5 p.m.
7,000 new housing units is impressive, but it's only a drop in the bucket.
A lot more has to be done.
Recently, the state of California passed a law saying
housing within a half mile of major public transit stops
will not require parking on site.
And this year, Los Angeles City Council
is poised to change everything.
In early May, City Council passed new zoning plans
for downtown Los Angeles and Hollywood.
The plans are designed to encourage more housing
and they include the elimination
of parking minimums for all new residential developments. There has been some pushback from
residents who worry about losing their parking spaces, but many urbanists are excited by the changes.
It feels like we are in the final days of minimum parking requirements, because LA isn't the only city going down this path.
San Jose, Seattle, Portland, Austin, Texas,
like it's all over the place.
It heralds exciting things for the future of
what's gonna happen with parking and architecture,
or at least a more flexible world in which people
who want to, for example, create low-income housing
with no parking spots are able to do so.
I think it does take some adjustment,
but at the end of the day, I think people
do recognize ultimately that housing for people
is more important than parking for cars.
The
Coming up, the incredible tale of how
selling Chicago's parking meters became a political
blunder for the history books.
After this. So we're back with Henry Gabbard.
Congratulations on the book.
It is so good.
I loved reading it.
It's easy breezy.
It has some stuff I know, some stuff it was brand new to me.
Why did you decide to focus on parking for the last two, five, six, seven years of your
life?
Because I just love it so much, Roman.
I can't get enough of it.
No, but the truth is that I'm a journalist.
I write about cities, and so I write about urban subjects,
like housing and transportation, and flooding,
and infrastructure, and in subject after subject
and in story after story, this thing kept coming up.
And this thing was this vast system of parking
that we've established, but that no one really understands,
and that exerts all these hidden consequences
on the way that all these other city systems work.
It can be something as basic as like,
why do we not have bus-rappered transit?
Like why do buses get stuck in traffic
and they have to run behind all these cars?
And the answer is often just because
the city is unwilling to mess with the street parking, right? I also just think it's interesting.
I mean, I know there's like a joke that like a parking that's so boring.
And I've definitely heard people say like, oh, wow, parking.
Fun.
But then you get them talking about it.
And it turns out that like everybody's gotten opinion.
So when it stories in your book that I knew a little bit about, but I didn't know the
full story of until I read it, is the
debacle of the privatization of parking meters in Chicago.
So could you just tell me that story and how that all got started?
Yeah, so when I was writing this book, I was living in Chicago, and as anybody who lives in
Chicago knows, Chicago has pretty high parking meter rates on some of its busy commercial corridors.
And the reason that Chicago has such high parking meter rates on some of its busy commercial corridors. And the reason that Chicago has the Thai parking meter rates on its busy commercial corridors
is because all the parking meters in the city were released to a group of Wall Street investors in 2008.
And so Chicago's parking meters are now run basically by Wall Street. And as a result,
they're really expensive and they make people really mad all the time.
And as we're still they're really expensive and they make people really mad all the time. So how did that happen?
How did this sort of public resource where the city makes a good kind of living, a one-quarter
at a time through targeting for parking and probably not targeting enough became something
that Morgan Stanley owned and monopolizes.
Yeah.
So in 2008, the mayor of Chicago, Richard M. Daily, is obsessed with
selling off some of the city's public resources. And he's got this idea that the future of municipal
government is in finding private operators who will pay the city for the privilege of running
these public services and do it better than the city used to do it, and the city will get more money
and everybody wins. And 2008, the recession is bearing down the stock market is tanking.
Everybody's starting to panic about the municipal budget and daily gets this offer from Morgan
Stanley.
And Morgan Stanley wants to rent Chicago's parking meters, all 36,000 parking meters for
the next 75 years.
And the bank is going to offer Chicago a flat payment of $1.1 billion.
And I think daily looks at that, and he says,
wow, dollar signs light up in his eyes,
and he says, a billion dollars, are you giving me, yes.
It's Chicago, right?
Like the mayor says he's got this great deal.
The city council basically gets brow beaten
into accepting it without even reading
the contract.
And by 2009, Chicago has sold all of its parking meters away for the next 75 years.
So are Chicago parking meters really that valuable?
Because for a long time, they were very affordable.
Like why did the city keep them so low?
I think part of the problem is that raising parking meter rates is very unpopular. And so Chicago was not alone in that it had basically
neglected to raise parking meter rates for decades,
to the extent that they cease to be useful as a way
of actually managing street space,
which is the kind of original purpose of the parking meter.
Listen, sidebar, the original purpose of the parking meter
is not to ring money out of
taxpayers, right? You can just raise taxes if that's what you want to do. The point of the parking
meter is to manage this scarce resource we have, which is like the curb, the vital access point
to all the property on a busy street. And the parking meter is a way to manage that. It's a way
to make sure that that's not monopolized all day by somebody who's just leaving their car there
for a day at a time.
And in Chicago, the parking meter had long ceased to have this function, right?
They'd gotten super cheap.
They hadn't raised the rates in decades.
And in fact, they were collecting somewhere between five and ten times more in parking
tickets than they were from the actual meters themselves.
And that's actually typical of most American cities.
There's more money comes from parking punishment
than from actually the parking meters themselves.
And that to me seems like a system
that's very poorly designed and working backwards.
When the time came and they received this offer
for the parking meters,
I don't think anybody really had a sense
of how high the price could go.
Now of course, that was implicit
in Morgan Stanley's offer, right?
Like there was no mystery
how they were gonna crunch a billion dollars out of these parking meters.
Obviously they were going to raise the parking meter rates,
but the city argued that politically speaking,
they didn't have the political capacity
to raise that money themselves.
It could only happen if they relinquished control
to this group of private investors for 75 years.
That's the only way those parking meter rates
could get that high.
How bad of a deal was this and how quickly did people figure it out?
It became apparent pretty quickly that this was a bad deal.
In 2009, six months after this deal gets signed, the Inspector General of Chicago Drops
report, the Inspector General, this guy's name is David Hoffman, and Hoffman finds that
the parking meters were worth between two and three and a half billion dollars.
And remember Chicago got and paid one billion dollars for them.
So basically, they had left a billion dollars on the table at minimum.
And it's not surprising because it was a very opaque bidding process.
Like, yes, they tested the market and they found the best buyer they could, but there were
only a couple of bitters and no surprise because like, how robust is the market and they found the best buyer they could, but there were only a couple of bitters and no surprise because like how robust is the market for like a 75-year lease
of 36,000 parking meters?
It's not like buying a gallon of milk, right?
It's very untested.
And so not surprisingly, Chicago worked really fast and they wound up with a very, very
bad deal.
And even worse than it appears, right?
Because not only did they realize pretty soon after,
like, wow, if we had raised our parking meter rates,
we could have made this money for the city.
And in fact, the investors who bought the parking meters
have since made their money back.
And this is, we are what, like, 15 years later now.
There are 60 years left on the deal,
and they have already made all their money back.
Insult to injury, right?
Not only were the parking meters more expensive, but instead of this revenue being used to
fund city improvements, clean the streets, build public infrastructure, plant trees, pay
for schools, whatever, all this money was going to Wall Street investors.
And that I think is very painful every time you pay for parking on a Chicago street.
You just feel like you're throwing money down the drain. And that's annoying.
And then the other thing about it
that became apparent in the years afterwards
was they hadn't just sold the parking meters,
but because the parking meters are tied
to the use of that street as parking,
you couldn't change the function of the streets.
And so if you wanted to build a back lane,
or a bus lane, it was gonna take away hundreds
of street parking spots. You had to find a back land or a bus land, it was going to take away hundreds of street
parking spots.
You had to find a way to compensate Morgan Stanley for all those disappeared parking spots.
You know, put meters in somewhere else and the meters there somewhere else had to be
just as good as the meters that went away.
And Chicago found itself in all this hot water.
We're pretty soon they were paying Morgan Stanley money.
And so Morgan Stanley started charging Chicago.
And Chicago was forking over tens of millions of dollars
every year to this company for problems with the meters.
Every time they wanted to hold a ticker tape parade,
you know, if the Cubs won the World Series,
every time they wanna have a farmer's market
or close the street, I mean, this becomes like
a major drag on the types of things
that the city is able to do.
And continues to be so.
And I think as Chicago begins to think
about how they're gonna provide electric vehicle charging at the curb, I think as Chicago begins to think about how they're going to provide
electric vehicle charging at the curb, I think it's going to be a real problem for them that they
do not have control over 36,000 of their best curb parking spaces. Wow. Well, Henry, the book is
so good and I enjoy talking with you and I know people listen to show, but I just love the hell out of it. So thank you so much. I appreciate it. Thanks for having me, Roland.
Henry Gabbard's book is called Paved Paradise,
How Parking Explains the World.
You can find it in bookstores right now.
99% invisible was produced this week by Chris Baroube,
original music by Swan Rial,
sound mixed by Martin Gonzales.
Delaney Hall is our senior editor, Kurt Colstead is our digital director. The Rosa team includes Jason
De Leon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Vivian Leigh, Loshamadon, Jacob Moltenotta Medina, Kelly Prime, Joe
Rosenberg, and me Roman Mars.
The 99% invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence, special thanks this week to Carol
Shatz.
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