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Current Parking Conditions

Current Parking Conditions. On-Street Parking Spaces. Off-Street Parking Garages. 6 major garages 2 – Public 3 – Private 1 – University Total Spaces: 1,688 Rates: $1.00-$2.50/hour. 1,394 Total On-Street Parking Spaces 9 26 metered spaces - $1.00/hour

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Current Parking Conditions

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  1. Current Parking Conditions On-Street Parking Spaces Off-Street Parking Garages • 6 major garages 2 – Public 3 – Private 1 – University • Total Spaces: 1,688 • Rates: $1.00-$2.50/hour • 1,394 Total On-Street Parking Spaces • 926 metered spaces - $1.00/hour 12% are 1/2 hour 46% are 1 hour 26% are 90 minute 16% are 2-hour • 428 un-metered spaces (2 hours without permit)

  2. Occupancy Rates (On-Street Parking and Garages) On-Street Parking Occupancy Weekday Average Occupancy Rate • 76 % during meter hours • 91 % during evening hours Saturday Average Occupancy Rate on Selected 59 Blocks • 78 % during meter hours • 91 % during evening hours Current Street Parking Revenue (Estimates) $1,303,380 per year -- Based on the surveyed occupancy rate (59%) that excludes vehicles with disabled placards Off-Street Parking Garages Occupancy Weekday Garage Occupancy Rate Weekend (Saturday) Garage Occupancy Rate • Weekday midday usage highest • Weekend usage light • The usage of University Hall Garage is too low. • Kittredge Garage manager mentions one issue is not being allowed to post signs to the Garage on major streets (mainly Shattuck). • Promenade Garage is similarly difficult to find, especially without prior knowledge.

  3. Turnover Study: Average Stay • Metered Spaces: • Meter feeding from downtown employees and visitors • Small percentage of drivers violate time limit • 7.6% cars with handicapped placard, with an average stay of 3.7 hours • Cluster in the northwest part of downtown Berkeley, near civic buildings and Alta Bates Medical Center on Dwight Way • Only 16 handicapped placard cars in Unmetered spaces compare to 414 cars in metered spaces • Most clustered between University Ave and Addison Street • Most shops and restaurants around University Ave • Unmetered Spaces: • Average stay is significantly higher than metered spaces due to RPPs • 1.1% cars with handicapped placard, with an average stay of 3.1 hours

  4. Total Parking Spillover in Downtown Berkeley • Total of 350 parking spots in the surveyed residential areas • Higher number of permitted cars at night than midday • Higher number of unpermitted cars on weekend than weekday Parking Spillover on East Side of Fulton – Most Extreme Case • Total of 10 parking spaces on East side of Fulton • The most extreme spillover case: highest shift between permitted and unpermitted cars during different times of day • Data might be skewed due to spillover from UC Berkeley

  5. Total Parking Spillover in Downtown Berkeley • Total of 350 parking spots in the surveyed residential areas • Higher number of permitted cars at night than midday • Higher number of unpermitted cars on weekend than weekday Parking Spillover on East Side of Fulton – Most Extreme Case • Total of 10 parking spaces on East side of Fulton • The most extreme spillover case: highest shift between permitted and unpermitted cars during different times of day • Data might be skewed due to spillover from UC Berkeley

  6. Introduction Maintain supply of parking in residential areas for residents Residential Perspective Reduce traffic impacts of future downtown development Insure parking availability within the core of downtown Encourage the use of alternative modes Studio Process Asses current parking conditions Emissions Reduction Perspective Business Perspective • This studio has accomplished several tasks towards the goal of developing a parking management strategy for Berkeley’s downtown • Engaged in a variety of data collection and analyses to ascertain current parking conditions in the downtown • Surveyed the Berkeley public about parking downtown and potential improvements in the area • Identified a series of parking related challenges and opportunities that could be addressed through a parking management strategy • Assembled a cost effective, phased parking management strategy for Downtown Berkeley that addresses various issues and opportunities • Estimated the revenue impacts of proposed parking management strategy and provided an expenditure plan funding a variety of targeted improvements in the downtown Reduce congestion related to cruising / circling for parking Maintain or reduce number of parking facilities in downtown Increase total trips to downtown Increase parking facilities in downtown Reduce vehicle trips to and within downtown Identify concerns and opportunities Formulate a parking management strategy Estimate revenue outcome and suggest potential expenditures Framing Parking Beyond addressing the individual parking needs of different downtown visitors, a successful parking management strategy should be crafted in a way that frames parking in terms of a broader economic, environmental, and social context. • Venn diagram to the left presents three distinct hypothetical “paradigms” for thinking about parking and the associated outcomes and policies each might support. • The way parking is framed informs what kinds of policy and management approaches may be appropriate • While different parking “paradigms” may be oriented towards differing goals, they may also have common objectives and preferred outcomes • Focusing on these areas of agreement provides the entry point for crafting a parking management strategy that will be acceptable to many different groups and interests

  7. Proposed Parking Management Strategy • Phase 1a • Objective: to generate increased revenue and begin management of high-demand parking locations • Actions: • Daytime downtown-wide meter rate increase • $1.50 – existing standard meterheads • $2.00 – existing Pay & Display spaces • Evening hours  existing Pay & Display • Meter hour extension  6 PM – 12 AM • Elimination of time limits after 6 PM • $1.00 • Educational campaign • Evening hour parking enforcement • Garage parking signage for all downtown garages • Revenue Estimation: • Revenue for this phase was estimated based on the occupancy studies conducted. An elasticity of -0.1 was assumed for fare increases. This means that a 100% fare increase will results in a 10% decrease in occupancy. • Phase 2 • Objective: to parking management capabilities to the entire downtown • Actions: • Convert all standard meterheads to Pay & Display • All daytime fares: $1.50 • Lollipop fare: $2.00 • All evening fares: $1.00 • Phase 1b • Objective: to extend parking management capabilities in the highest-demand locations and redistribute parking demand to underutilized spaces • Actions: • High occupancy “lollipop corridor” • Replace all standard meterheads within the corridor with Pay & Display meters • Daytime rate: $2.00 • Evening rate: $1.00 • 6 PM – 12 AM • No evening time limits • Revenue Estimation: Lots of empty space? Fill it with future parking managementstrategies?? MAP MAP

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