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Liberalizing cities | From the bottom up

“Market Urbanism” refers to the synthesis of classical liberal economics and ethics (market), with an appreciation of the urban way of life and its benefits to society (urbanism). We advocate for the emergence of bottom up solutions to urban issues, as opposed to ones imposed from the top down.

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LA’s partial parking privatization

February 3, 2010 By Stephen Smith

by Stephen Smith The LA Times reports that Los Angeles is considering "privatizing" ten public parking garages to fill a budget shortfall. The story is, unfortunately, a reminder of how infrastructure "privatization" is often little better than the status quo, and how media reporting of the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: parking, privatization Tagged With: LA, parking, parking meters, Stephen Smith

Redistribution

January 23, 2009 By Adam Hengels

Discussing Ithaca, New York's plan to increase permitted density and reduce parking minimums, I can dig what Matthew Yglesias says : The distributive impact of parking minimums is to redistribute income from people who don’t own cars to people who do own cars—not to shift income from poor to rich. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Economics, housing, parking Tagged With: density, Environment, housing, Matthew Yglesias, parking

Taxing Land Speculation

January 22, 2009 By Adam Hengels

Bill Hudnut at the Urban Land Institute wrote a post that attracted some attention at Austin Contrarian and Overhead Wire. Hudnut discusses a different approach to taxing land: How about restructuring the property tax across America to install a two-tiered system? More tax on those horizontal … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Economics, Jane Jacobs, planning Tagged With: density, development, Jane Jacobs, NIMBY, parking, sprawl

Urban[ism] Legend: Is Houston really unplanned?

December 10, 2008 By Stephen Smith

by Stephen Smith It seems to be an article of faith among many land use commentators – both coming from the pro- and anti-planning positions – that Houston is a fundamentally unplanned city, and that whatever is built there is the manifest destiny of the free market in action. But is this true? … [Read more...]

Filed Under: planning, sprawl, Urban[ism] Legends, Zoning Tagged With: Houston, parking, sprawl, Stephen Smith

Irrationality Towards Shortages

December 8, 2008 By Adam Hengels

Brendan Crain at Where tipped me off to a great post by Ryan Avent at The Bellows. Here's a little snippet of Shortage: For whatever reason, we’re not built to naturally internalize negative externalities. When riding on a crowded highway, no one (no non-economist, at any rate) curses the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Economics, parking, Transportation Tagged With: Chicago, government, highways, Matthew Yglesias, parking, traffic

Chicago Privatizes Parking Meters

December 2, 2008 By Adam Hengels

Of course, Chicago is just privatizing the revenue from meters, not the actual parking spaces. Plus, the city will regulate rate increases, but it's a step in the right direction. (right?) For today's politicians, this is a great way to get windfalls of money today for revenues of future … [Read more...]

Filed Under: privatization, video Tagged With: Chicago, parking, parking meters, privatization

Parking Minimums Hamper Development and Affordability

September 22, 2008 By Adam Hengels

Thanks to Dan and Benjamin for separately tipping me off to this link: AP: Cities rethink wisdom of 50s-era parking standards Like nearly all U.S. cities, D.C. has requirements for off-street parking. Whenever anything new is built — be it a single-family home, an apartment building, a store … [Read more...]

Filed Under: parking Tagged With: congestion, dc, housing, parking, planning

Happy Park(ing) Day 2008

September 19, 2008 By Adam Hengels

I guess I must not be hip enough to have known about this beforehand, but there's a very interesting citywide event happening here in New York today called Park(ing) Day. All throughout New York City, people are reclaiming parking spaces for their street-side enjoyment. It's a very novel idea that … [Read more...]

Filed Under: parking, planning, Transportation Tagged With: Market, nyc, parking, parking spaces, video

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