BUSINESSPENNSYLVANIA CAPITAL-STAR
To promote more housing, cities and states target parking minimums
Cities and states are reducing or eliminating minimum parking requirements to address housing shortages and lower development costs. Since 2017, 116 cities, including Baltimore and San Francisco, have removed such mandates, while 14 states have enacted 34 related laws. Critics argue this may worsen congestion and harm accessibility for some groups, but proponents highlight affordability and project feasibility benefits.
Mentioned
Related Signal
Adjacent reporting
- To promote more housing, cities and states target parking minimums
- Legislation targets large parking lots to protect state’s waterways
- Scrapping 86,000 new car parking spaces could save $5.2bn and drive down rents, Grattan report finds
- New construction reduces housing shortage in most states
- Fury as developers are urged to cut number of allocated parking bays in new estates so there is more space for homes