This post incorporates content from Streetsblog Chicago Cofounder and Advisor Steven Vance’s development data website Chicago Cityscape. This week there was reason to celebrate for both Chicago sustainable transportation fans, and folks working to make housing more plentiful in our city. Prior to Wednesday’s City Council vote, Chicago’s Connected Communities Ordinance, passed in July 2022, […]
Making space for storing large metal boxes is no longer mandatory.
I think a city has a right to zone this way. Building parking means cars come. The city is encouraging different means of transportation by limiting the cars coming in. They’re not saying you, Joe Apartment Renter, can’t bring your car; just that you won’t have a spot to park in, and you’ll have to go on the hunt every night when you get home. So it’s basically discouraging folks who require a car from choosing to live here.
Of course, I agree with you. I owned a car for some years (don’t anymore) and didn’t have a parking spot on the grounds of my apartment building at the time, I always needed to find a parking space on a public street (usually didn’t take long, I usually managed to park next to the block I live in).
I think a city has a right to zone this way. Building parking means cars come. The city is encouraging different means of transportation by limiting the cars coming in. They’re not saying you, Joe Apartment Renter, can’t bring your car; just that you won’t have a spot to park in, and you’ll have to go on the hunt every night when you get home. So it’s basically discouraging folks who require a car from choosing to live here.
Of course, I agree with you. I owned a car for some years (don’t anymore) and didn’t have a parking spot on the grounds of my apartment building at the time, I always needed to find a parking space on a public street (usually didn’t take long, I usually managed to park next to the block I live in).