This guest post by Malcolm McCracken originally appeared on his blog Better Things Are Possible, and is republished here by kind permission.

The case for Parking Benefit Districts: managing on-street parking for local benefit

Parking is often the centre of debate in our cities; particularly on-street car parks, who gets to use them and how we manage them. Recent controversy has focused on new infill housing developments, which often provide fewer off-street car parks or none at all, which can lead to increased pressure on the street.(1) This comes on the back of councils, at the direction of central government through the National Policy Statement on Urban Development, removing Minimum Parking Requirements of new homes to provide off-street car parks.(2)

Busy on-street parking in Henderson outside an 11-home infill development, which has 0 off-street car parks.

So, why remove Minimum Parking Requirements? It is critical for housing affordability and supply

Ultimately, car parks cost money and place a high cost on new housing supply, contributing to lower supply and affordability issues. In simple terms, a car park takes up land and has a construction cost.

Let’s play this out in two completed developments in Te Atatū Peninsula in Auckland. One development provided zero car parks and the other provided one car park per unit.

The Auckland Council 2021 property valuations found land in the area was ~$2142 per m2. The minimum car park area is 12.5m2 (excluding driveway access), making the land required for a car park ~$26,785 alone. Access, between the 8 car parks, requires another ~120m2 or $257,040 of land. Splitting this between the 8 car parks brings the total land cost of each car park to $58,915, and that is before the cost of construction.

Two development plans from Taikata Road in Te Atatū. One with 0 car parks and 10 homes. The other with 8 homes, each coming with a car park.

So, in the development with 0 car parks, purchasers were able to save ~$60,000 on the car park. It also enabled an additional two homes to be built on the same land area, which could be expected to provide some efficiencies of scale and potentially reduce build costs further.

In several recent apartment developments in Auckland, car parks have been “unbundled” from units when buying off the plan. This means buyers had a choice on whether they want a car park, and can see the price of the car park, separate from the apartment. The cost of these car parks has ranged in cost from $40,000 to $60,000 off the plans in most suburban apartment developments.

This reduces the barrier for first home buyers or means someone could spend the equivalent on a larger home or better furnishings. Fundamentally though, this is about enabling choice. Individuals should be able to buy or rent homes without paying for parking or indeed, being able to choose how they pay.


Managing the effects

The issue with this, as we opened with, is the flow-on effect to on-street parking supply, when some residents inevitably end up parking on the street. Existing residents might be accustomed to being able to park on the street easily, even if they have space to park on their property. Busy on-street parking can also create issues for vehicles being able to move along a street, which is particularly an issue with emergency vehicles.

It’s important to recognise that streets are public spaces, and no one should have a right to use the space over another person. So, how can we manage it better, to ensure parking for those who need it, while for local benefit?

At the start of this article, we discussed the cost of off-street parking to purchase a home. This cost also exists for those renting homes. By pricing on-street parking, we can encourage people to consider how they want to pay for parking, either purchasing or renting a home with off-street parking or paying for on-street. This can reduce demand, improving the availability of car parking for those who need it.


Parking Benefit Districts

Okay, but who wants to pay for something they currently use for free? Well, this is where Parking Benefit Districts come in.

A Parking Benefit District is where revenue from on-street parking is ‘ringfenced’ to the local area, so people see the money invested in their local area. Part of the opposition to paid parking is that no one knows where revenue from paid parking goes, they don’t see any benefits from it (even if it does improve car park availability), so they often view it as a ‘revenue gathering scheme’.

This concept is excellently explained by Donald Shoup in his 2023 paper Parking Benefit Districts (3), though he originally detailed this in The High Cost of Free Parking. (4)

“Charging for curb parking and spending the revenue on general public services produces pain for curb parkers and no obvious gain for anyone else. Spending the revenue to improve public services on the metered streets will turn the pain for curb parkers into gains for businesses in a commercial district or people in a residential neighborhood.”

This could work in different ways in different contexts, noting that the revenue is likely to be limited in most circumstances, and therefore will not be able to fund large capital projects.

In suburban residential areas, where intensification is occurring, revenue could be used to fund new street trees, increase investment in local road and footpath maintenance, safe crossings at parks and schools, playgrounds or improved public transport infrastructure like bus shelters. Whatever it is, by giving the community a say on how the money is spent in their neighbourhood, support can grow for charging for on-street car parks.

In Town Centres and higher-density, mixed-use areas, the ringfenced revenue could be expected to be higher, based on higher demand for parking in these areas. Again, engagement with residents and businesses is critical to deciding how revenue is spent. However, in busy areas, it has the potential to help bridge funding gaps on street upgrades and community infrastructure.

For this (and all parking management) to work, councils need to be able to undertake enforcement and fines should at least cover the cost of enforcement, or the system falls over. It’s positive to see changes coming on this front to bring penalties and towage fees in line with recent inflation. (5)

Parking is often contentious. However, like all challenges associated with urban intensification, with the right approach and engagement with the community, it can also be an opportunity to help create better functioning and more liveable towns and cities.


References

(1) Ovenden, K. and M. McKelvie (2024). Life in medium density housing in Tāmaki Makaurau / Auckland. Auckland Council technical report, TR2024/6

(2) Ministry for the Environment (2022). National Policy Statement on Urban Development 2020 – Updated May 2022.

(3) Shoup, D. (2023). Parking Benefit Districts. Journal of Planning Education and Research.

(4) Shoup, D. (2005). High Cost of Free Parking (1st ed.). Routledge.

(5) Brown, S and Upston, L (2024). Government to update parking penalties.

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22 comments

  1. Bring on the on-street parking management – simple, straightforward enforcement, efficiently executed, without all the made-up palaver about legal risks. Parking Benefit Districts would have been a really useful tool about twenty years ago, which was when people were starting to use kerbside spaces overnight in larger numbers. It could still be a useful tool today. It is certainly better than making no changes. Some thoughts to follow…

    1. Yes – for so long people have been “allowed” to park wherever and whatever they like we are having now to deal with their sense of entitlement. It is not uncommon to see boats, caravans, trailer units and increasingly mini storage boxes on trailers acting as advertising sites.

  2. Concerns include:
    1/ Council needs to consider equity between areas. All areas need investment, some more than others. I know people are getting innovative about this kind of local ringfencing to get stuff done, but it does undermine proper discussion about equity. There’s nothing wrong with taking parking revenue from Remuera and spending it in Kelston.
    2/ The reality is that in 2024 we have need of a bigger transformational change to the transport system. In most streets, the space is needed – urgently – for wider footpaths and social spaces, cycle lanes and green infrastructure such as trees. Not parking. Communications would need to stress that providing any parking on the street is potentially only an interim solution to our transport issues.
    3/ If the parking fee is set lower than what covers the administrative and land costs, opportunity costs and knock-on costs throughout the transport system of allowing people to park their cars there, which would almost certainly be the case, then it would be critical to have this subsidy upfront in the communications.

  3. You write that people can choose between “purchasing or renting a home with off-street parking or paying for on-street.”

    In our horrific housing market I think this choice is overstated, especially for renters. If I had to move today my “choice” would be between the house with the lowest and second lowest rent.

  4. The ability to choose to go without a carpark should be extended to other density restrictions. People should be able to choose a smaller section than mandated by a Council plan, less of a front setback, less space at the sides and back, and greater height. If individuals could choose to relax zoning laws when buying off the plans or renting many would, helping to bring housing costs down. Currently zoning laws are mainly decided by existing property owners.

    1. Why don’t we also get rid of bathrooms . How about having no windows. That would save costs!
      This might sound like nonsense, but it’s not a big shift from the kind of ‘race to the bottom’ stuff you are talking about, in the name of ‘affordability’.
      Sorry to burst your bubble, but the answer to affordability does not lie in removing every form of reasonable minimum building standards.
      Rather it will only come from a massive uplift in community housing, shared equity etc.
      But go for your life, keep up your belief in planning regulation as the source of all evil in terms of housing unaffordability, like most other people who comment here. The useful idiots for the developers who are only happy to race to the bottom.

  5. The Lloyd Burr article in yesterday’s, 18th Sept, Stuff covers some of AT’s current intentions in this matter.
    https://www.stuff.co.nz/nz-news/350408840/auckland-explained-goodbye-free-car-parks-hello-bigger-fines.
    The comments make interesting reading and suggest their will be strong populist push back to both reducing parking availability and actually charging for the private benifit of storing private property on public lands.
    With an extreme populist Minister of Transport, and a mellowing, but still populist Mayor, I suspect populism will once again forestall progress.

    On another matter, after much news from the Capital about the loss of central city parking being a prime cause of retail and hospitality industry decay in Wellington an in interesting, and perhaps unintentional counter
    https://www.stuff.co.nz/nz-news/350418954/parklets-completely-expanded-wellington-businesses-amid-industry-struggle
    Where the removal of car parks had made a material improvement to hospitality businesses

  6. It’s just externalising the problem of the car owner out to the rest of the neighbourhood, isn’t it?
    Was it the mayor of Barcelona who responded to questions about ‘where can I park my car’ with something along the lines of, ‘you wouldn’t ask me where to store your fridge’.
    I have plenty of these infill developments in my neighbourhood and it results in people parking all over the footpaths and berms. AT need to get serious about enforcing existing rules before introducing any new ones.

    1. At have several number plate recognition cars,and are getting more.These make ” computer says no” decisions on overstaying and incorrect parking.

    2. Yes, regarding enforcement.

      It’s worthwhile remembering that people living in infill developments with fewer offstreet parking spaces own fewer cars per capita. People living in the original, lower density housing with more offstreet parking spaces own more cars. So, it is the older development type, not the infill development, that creates the parking pressure *at all the places that people drive to*.

      The solution being, as you said, for AT to enforce the existing rules.

  7. The reality of “choice” is the key issue. Developers are chiefly interested in what the cost of land and building are vs. the market price they can sell at, more often to a landlord than to an owner-occupier. Banks are concerned about security of loans and maximising the debt that they can sell to buyers. Residents have to make do with whatever is on the market, whether they like it or not. Houses are often now built too small for their needs without using garage space for living instead of car storage, as found by a Council research survey.
    Separating the provision of parking space from home ownership/occupancy is likely to improve efficiency, but will only work when there is the opportunity to manage the total car storage space allowed within accessible distance of homes. The current no-minimum setting does not guarantee in any sense that developers will provide sufficient car storage, in whatever form, for current and future needs. Parking minimums were a coarse tool that would usually require more car storage than people will need in the future, so developing mechanisms to manage the excessive car ownership of today while planning for less in the future is a high priority.
    The issue certainly should not be decided by the people who have large sections with ample storage for their necessary plus extra car ownership, without research and opinion of those struggling to afford a home and earn enough to finance housing costs – which may include needing to keep a van or ute for trade purposes at home. This is notoriously difficult when Council rules do not require on-site parking spaces to be big enough for such vehicles.

  8. “which often provide fewer off-street car parks or none at all, which can lead to increased pressure on the street.”

    To be perfectly honest, in many cases I feel like this is a distraction. Consider this picture I took last night:

    https://imgur.com/a/4H7dnv1

    You can see there are garages with driveways. Yeah, it’s a single garage but look here’s another photo:

    https://imgur.com/a/e4RB8gw

    Those are double garages and still with driveways you can park on. Now, sure, this one was taken on a Saturday rather than about 6:20pm on a weekday so maybe those cars are all visitors but I don’t believe that and I don’t think you believe that either.

    Now it is true that older developments (and especially streets where you can’t even tell what the development pattern was) you don’t really see this sort of thing. You get it a little but not to this extent. But you can park four cars on the properties in that second picture — two in the garage, two in the driveway — but instead we get this picture. Yes, there are plenty of older houses where you can park six or eight cars between the garage/carport, drive way and front lawn but you can walk past those properties and see that’s not what’s going on.

    Whatever is up with the new developments has something to do with the people living in them, not the built design of the properties.

    I don’t know any with “no parking spaces at all” so I can’t comment on that part, but for the ones I see, it doesn’t matter if they’re 1 garage + 1 driveway or 2 garage + 2 driveway, you get this spillover on to the street. And while if we take the two images I’ve shown you as being representative, you can say the former situation is worse it’s clearly not a difference of kind, merely degree.

    The way I see it these new developments are:

    1. disproportionately affordable to occupants that have more than a 1:1 relationship between cars and adults intending on living in the property
    2. disproportionately affordable only to occupants that have a 1:1 relationship between cars and adults but have 3+ adults in the occupying group

    I see a lot of people who I internally register as grandparents around these places so maybe what’s going on is you have mum & dad with one car apiece and then a car for their parents (or even two). Or maybe I’m just terrible at telling how old people are. But, also, I have no idea how far the people I see have come. Maybe like me they’ve been walking for a while.

    1. I sometimes figure some people find it hard / slower to park in their own garages, driveways etc when they can so will park on the street as it’s easier. In that case they won’t park “internally” until they really have to.
      Your observation about “…can park six or eight cars between the garage/carport, drive way and front lawn …”. Well there is an issue if car jammed in first can’t get out without the others all moving first. It also shows that if we keep a mixing of housing types, that those that are not that rich enough to buy huge properties in country estates with 4 car garaging say can live in plenty of other places where there’s lots of car parking and we can allow the more dense areas to continue to squeeze the parking as they can shift to move active modes / public transport /car share to move about.

      1. The Castle “I need to get the Torana out to get to the Commodore.” “Sure thing Dad, but I’ll have to get the keys to the Cortina if I’m gunna move that Camira.” “Alright mate, just watch the boat”

  9. Maybe it’s the way that we choose to live our lives that make housing so damn unaffordable. The most liveable city in the world has an average living space per person of 36sq m. Is Auckland’s twice that? And then on top of that some developers build roads with parking on both sides and so the property purchasers pay for that as well. And if there is a shortage of parking space, and Council provides it, then the home owner /ratepayer pays again.
    And the scourge of our cities, far flung developments like Westgate, where the developer decides to sue so that someone else, the Council, pays for transport solutions.
    The system is broken. It’s broken because we don’t require the purchaser to pay the full cost and therefore housing becomes more unaffordable for everyone. The poorest, who by necessity have chosen solutions that don’t involve much travel, subsidise those who do travel.
    So when I see a solution like paid parking, or congestion charging, I applaud it, because while it is likely to be imperfect, at least it is transferring some of the cost to those who use the infrastructure.

  10. The article misses the point I feel. Far too many developments are being approved in areas with under width streets. The result of the on street parking is to basically reduce roads to one lane roads, which don’t actually function.

    AT of course does nothing about the problem because we over consult on bloody everything – even installing yellow lines!

  11. I would love to see all roads as that roads clear of obstructions. Unfortunately with all this infill housing people have little choice but to park on the street. Realistically to own a car you should be able to prove you have a place to store it that’s not the road. Unfortunately now we’ve let so much housing be designed without carparks if the govt or even council in this case tried to do that there would be a mass revolt and riots. We are now stuck with these narrow congested streets. Sigh. Oh well at least the speeds are getting raised back up to bring some sanity back to driving and luckily the evidence is out speed isn’t that big a factor. https://centrist.co.nz/the-truth-about-speed-kills-part-2/

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