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Tim Helm's avatar

Lower Hutt is a very car-centric city. Very few people can choose a car-free lifestyle.

I appreciate why people buy units without off-site carparks: on-street parking is currently plentiful and unpriced. But what happens when on-street parking becomes full? Or when Council wishes to reallocate road space, such as for bus lanes or separated cycle lanes? There will be many people now reliant on on-street parking who will cry foul at the change of rules, and who will be genuinely affected.

Do you think that removing car parking requirements before being clear about the future availability and pricing of on-street parking is fair?

It seems to me that we're making it harder to reallocate road space in future, we're likely stranding some residents who will (understandably) have bought into developments lacking off-street parking on the assumption of no change to on-street parking rules, and we're letting developers take higher profits by effectively exploiting the mismatch between what myopic home buyers imagine the future might look like and what the likely future of priced on-street parking and less of it will actually be.

It doesn't seem like trading on this mismatch in expectations for the purpose of achieving a one-off increase in housing supplied at a slightly lower price, but with all those side-effects mentioned, is that smart.

In Wellington right now the Council is finding it difficult to reallocate road space away from residents' parking for the purpose of cycle lanes (e.g. in Aro Valley). Sure, residents have no codified right to park on the street forever, but ordinary people have reasonable expectations that the rules won't change rapidly and significantly. By not requiring off-street parking in years gone by, we have made the politics of changing road use more difficult.

My sense is that in parts of Wellington City the removal of parking requirements will cause a bit of a "first in, first served" mentality amongst developers. Developments in the near future will lack parking, trading on buyers' ignorance of forthcoming road space changes. On-street parking will get congested. Bus and car travel times will slow. Council will reduce on-street parking to fix these problems. Residents will be upset and roads will be less functional. Future developers will include parking, to satisfy increasingly nervous buyers, but the damage of building out 5-10 years worth of new houses without off-street parking will have been done. The demand for on-street parking will be irreversibly increased just as Council is wishing to reduce the supply of it.

One role for planning is surely to co-ordinate expectations. Deregulating parking doesn't seem consistent with that. If regulated parking minimums are what developers are going to voluntarily supply in time anyway, in response to market demand and the problems caused by deregulating parking minimums, couldn't we just avoid the problematic phase in this process altogether by getting smarter about regulated parking requirements instead of tossing them out entirely? If there's a problem with the current minimums, fix the minimums, but don't junk them entirely and create another problem altogether.

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