According to the results of a just-released survey, the country is undergoing a parking revolution as the industry embraces a variety of new technologies that make it easier for people to find and pay for parking, and for parking authorities to better manage it.
The 2013 Emerging Trends in Parking survey was conducted among members of the International Parking Institute (IPI) and released at the 2013 IPI Conference & Expo, May 19-22. Cities leading in parking innovation include San Francisco; Seattle; New York; Los Angeles; Washington, D.C.; Portland, Ore; Miami; Houston; Boston; Denver; Pittsburgh; and Tampa. Dozens of other cities were identified.
Survey highlights include:
1. Smartphones: Solution to the "space race?"
Topping the list of trends in the $30 billion parking industry is the "move toward innovative technologies to improve parking access control and payment automation," cited by 59 percent of respondents. Another top trend is "real-time communication of pricing and availability to mobile/smart phones" (52 percent).
Both trends are evident in San Francisco's federally-funded SFpark pilot project, which supplies real-time information on the availability and cost of on- and off-street parking, drastically reducing driver circling while hunting for open spaces, congestion, and double-parking.
According to San Francisco County Transportation Authority Park Manager Jay Primus, the city also may be the first in the U.S. to quantify the number of available parking spaces in all public lots, garages, and city blocks. Seattle's new electronic parking guidance system uses dynamic real-time message signs and web information to direct people to available off-street parking at six downtown garages.
2. Payment options continue to expand
The second leading trend is the demand for electronic (cashless) payment, with cities such as Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, Houston, and Miami, among others, incorporating pay-by-phone programs. Acclaimed as the world's most successful of its type, the D.C. program has earned 550,000 customers and accounts for 40 percent of the city's parking revenues.
About 80 percent of the seven million transactions to date employ smart phones, with payment options that include credit cards, online and mobile money management solutions, and PayPal. Miami and Pittsburgh are among the pioneering cities in incorporating license-plate recognition technology as another means of quick and efficient payment.
3. Taking a smarter business approach
The trends toward "demand for greater parking revenue" (38 percent) and "more public-private partnerships" (24 percent) are demonstrated by Miami's innovative public-private partnerships. Similar programs have been launched in cities such as Houston, where consultants posed the question: "What would a parking program look like if it was managed by Nordstrom?" prompting a focus on parking as an engine for municipal economic development.
4. Green solutions sprouting up
Other notable trends include "collaboration between parking, transportation, and decision makers" (43 percent), "need for improved customer service," (31 percent), and "demand for green/sustainable solutions" (30 percent). Among the technology considered to have the greatest potential in improving sustainability are "guidance systems to enable drivers to find parking faster (and reduce carbon emissions)" (57 percent); "energy-efficient lighting" (55 percent); "encouraging alternative travel" by providing bike storage, car/bike share, access to transit, etc. (42 percent); "accommodating electric-vehicle charging stations: (21 percent), :renewable-energy installations such as solar panels and wind power"; and "innovative water and storm water management systems" (11 percent).
For example, the City of Tampa cut its energy costs in half by upgrading lighting in its parking facilities, joining Miami, Denver, and other cities in offering citywide electric-vehicle charging stations. Miami was among the first U.S. city to partner with a car-share program, which has since taken root in a number of other cities across the country.
Related Stories
Airports | Dec 6, 2016
Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport creates a destination inside Terminal 3
DWL Architects, SmithGroupJJR, and Corgan design passenger experience that connects to the surrounding city and Sonoran desert landscape.
Airports | Nov 1, 2016
FAA forecasts a modest dip in spending for airports over next five years
Latest report based on surveys of 3,340 existing and proposed public-use airports.
Airports | Aug 31, 2016
Aircraft manufacturing facility innovation from The Austin Company
Austin’s many innovations contributed to the success of our clients by enabling them to operate in more efficient environments, optimize the flexibility of their operations, and meet aggressive schedules.
| Jul 29, 2016
AIRPORT FACILITIES GIANTS: Airports binge on construction during busy year for travel
Terminal construction will grow by nearly $1 billion this year, and it will keep increasing. Airports are expanding and modernizing their facilities to keep passengers moving.
Airports | Jun 1, 2016
LaGuardia Airport’s massive redevelopment begins construction
The development consortium has secured financing for the $4 billion project, and signed an operating lease through 2050.
Airports | Apr 6, 2016
HOK leads joint venture to expand and modernize Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport’s domestic passenger terminal
The domestic passenger terminal is just the tip of the spear, as the world’s most traveled airport is about to undergo 20 years and $6 billion worth of changes.
Giants 400 | Jan 29, 2016
AIRPORT TERMINAL GIANTS: KPF, Jacobs, Hensel Phelps among top airport sector AEC firms
BD+C's rankings of the nation's largest airport sector design and construction firms, as reported in the 2015 Giants 300 Report
Metals | Jan 19, 2016
6 ways to use metal screens and mesh for best effect
From airy façades to wire mesh ceilings to screening walls, these projects show off the design possibilities with metal.
| Jan 14, 2016
How to succeed with EIFS: exterior insulation and finish systems
This AIA CES Discovery course discusses the six elements of an EIFS wall assembly; common EIFS failures and how to prevent them; and EIFS and sustainability.
Airports | Dec 13, 2015
Skybridge connects a terminal and airport on each side of the U.S.-Mexico border
Cross Border Xpress is the first phase of a larger development that will include hotels and offices.