In 2007, I saw this in a residential neighborhood near central Copenhagen:

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

A rack for 10 bicycles had grown where an on-street car parking space had been. In Copenhagen, where 50 percent of residents commute by bike, on-street bicycle parking was a sensible idea—fit 10 bikes where one car could go, thus freeing up the sidewalk from a cluster of parked cycles.

Fast-forward several years, and Copenhagen parking has grown up to bigger and pinker things:

Photo by Mikael Colville-Anderson, cc.

Photo by Mikael Colville-Anderson, cc.

This car-shaped storage unit provides secure, rainproof space for four cargo bicycles in a space equivalent to 1.5 vehicle parking spots.

As Alan Durning will detail in an upcoming article, on-street parking takes up a lot of space in North American cities: 5 to 8 percent of all urban land, according to UCLA urban planning professor Donald Shoup. If parking reforms—like pricing on-street spaces—reduce the need for curb parking in our cities, what will we do with all that extra space?

As it turns out, Cascadian cities are already trying out some exciting new ideas. In this article, we’ll look at four things parking can grow up to become: bike corrals, international PARK(ing) Day, parklets, and café seating.

In Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood, this car-shaped bicycle rack creatively reminds people just how many cycles can fit in a space formerly used to park one car:

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

According to the Seattle Department of Transportation, business owners can request an on-street bicycle rack out front, and the city will install one if warranted.

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

Since 2010, San Francisco has created more than 300 bicycle parking spaces—in racks known as bike corrals—in place of 30 car parking spots. The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (MTA) will consider installing a bike corral in places where demand for bicycle parking exceeds available space on the sidewalk. The MTA prefers to place corrals near intersections, which helps improve sightlines for all road users.

Photo by sfbike, cc.

Photo by sfbike, cc.

Portland has nearly 100 bicycle corrals throughout the city:

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

Photo by Alyse Nelson.

Streetfilms, an organization with a mission to showcase smart urban planning solutions on film, visited Portland to learn about bicycle corrals:

Streetfilms spoke with Portland Department of Transportation’s Greg Raisman about the appeal of on-street bicycle corrals. “There’s something that’s quite empowering about parking your bicycle on the asphalt. It’s a real equalizer,” he said. “It feels like…when I’m riding my bicycle or I’m driving my car, my community and my city respects me equally.”

On-street bicycle parking is just the beginning. With streets making up a fifth to a third of the urban land area (for example, 27 percent in Seattle, 25 percent in San Francisco, and 20 percent in Portland), cities have implemented a host of creative ways to use on-street parking spaces for other purposes.

One idea that has spread around the globe is PARK(ing) Day, an annual event in September in which curb parking spaces are transformed into people places for a day. It all started in San Francisco in 2005, when a design firm called Rebar turned a single on-street parking space into a temporary public park with sod, a bench, and a tree.

Since then, San Francisco’s PARK(ing) Days have included places to kick back and listen to tunes:

Photo by Inhabitat Blog, cc.

Photo by Inhabitat Blog, cc.

And kick a ball:

Photo by Steve Rhodes, cc.

Photo by Steve Rhodes, cc.

Card games, belly dancing, live cello music—these have all been part of PARK(ing) Day in San Francisco, as captured in a Streetfilms video.

Rebar decided to share its idea with the world, creating a free, downloadable PARK(ing) Day Manual as well as graphics and posters for participants to use and a Google Earth map to track all PARK(ing) Day events.

In 2011, the event grew to nearly 1,000 PARK(ing) Day parks in 162 cities worldwide. Participants have adapted the design strategy to include temporary art exhibits, bicycle repair stations, and urban agriculture plots, such as this one in Seattle:

Photo by Jeanine Anderson, cc.

Photo by Jeanine Anderson, cc.

PARK(ing) Day 2010 brought chickens to Seattle’s streets:

Photo by Seattle Dept. of Transportation, cc.

Photo by Seattle Dept. of Transportation, cc.

An on-street café was part of PARK(ing) Day in Portland:

Photo by Elly Blue, cc.

Photo by Elly Blue, cc.

The mission of PARK(ing) Day is to “call attention to the need for more urban open space, to generate critical debate around how public space is created and allocated, and to improve the quality of urban human habitat… at least until the meter runs out!”  The temporary parks help people see the power of public spaces and imagine a future where less space is dedicated to the private automobile.

The success of PARK(ing) Day has generated enthusiasm for more permanent installations in parking spots. In 2010, San Francisco became the first city in the world to create “parklets”—mini urban parks that typically take up a couple of on-street parking spaces. Platforms raise the parklets to the level of the curb, ensuring ADA accessibility; other features include landscaping, benches, tables and chairs, and bicycle racks.

This San Francisco parklet has café tables:

Photo by Michael Pucci of Pucci Residential Design. Used with permission.

Photo by Michael Pucci of Pucci Residential Design. Used with permission.

This one in the Mission District is hosted by three businesses: Revolution Café, Escape From New York Pizza, and Loló Restaurant:

Photo by Rebar, cc.

Photo by Rebar, cc.

This parklet on Noriega Street in the Outer Sunset neighborhood is hosted by Devil’s Teeth Baking Company:

Photo by San Francisco Planning Department, cc.

Photo by San Francisco Planning Department, cc.

This parklet on 9th Avenue near Golden Gate Park is hosted by Arizmendi Bakery:

Photo by Jack Verdoni Architecture, cc.

Photo by Jack Verdoni Architecture, cc.

Photo by Jack Verdoni Architecture, cc.

Photo by Jack Verdoni Architecture, cc.

Parking spaces at Haight Street Market in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood have grown this parklet:

Photo by San Francisco Planning Department, cc.

Photo by San Francisco Planning Department, cc.

The city accepts applications for parklets once a year. Selected proposals go through a vetting process that includes public noticing and construction review. Parklets are built, insured, and maintained by private property owners but must be open to the public and subject to city inspection.

  • Our work is made possible by the generosity of people like you!

    Thanks to Shirlee Evans for supporting a sustainable Cascadia.

  • Even though parklets take up on-street parking spaces, they are placed in neighborhoods that are busy with pedestrian and bicycle traffic. That helps businesses see them as a boon. According to Andres Power of the San Francisco Pavement to Parks Program, “it’s the businesses that are clamoring for this most. There’s a nexus that helps us move beyond the concern over parking loss.”

    Three years after the program’s inception, 40 parklets have grown in San Francisco, with 40 more in the planning and permitting stages.

    Other cities are following suit. Vancouver has a pilot parklet program in place to turn streets into community gathering places. The city’s first parklet, Parallel Park, was built in 2011 in the East Vancouver neighborhood of Mount Pleasant:

    Photo by Joming Lau, cc.

    Photo by Joming Lau, cc.

    The parklet takes the place of two parking spaces and includes a wooden deck, bench seating, and tables. Parallel Park was voted “Best Place to Park Your Butt for Free” by the city’s Georgia Straight newspaper, and it even has its own Facebook page.

    VIVA Vancouver, the city program in charge of the parklet program, pitched the idea to business improvement districts across Vancouver. The South Hill Business Association submitted a proposal for the Hot Tubs Parklet, which opened in September 2012:

    Photo by Paul Krueger, cc.

    Photo by Paul Krueger, cc.

    In Portland, a pilot program called Street Seats grew three parklets in 2012. This one, outside Wafu noodle bar, was the first:

    Photo by Sarah Figliozzi, cc.

    Photo by Sarah Figliozzi, cc.

    Unlike the parklet programs in San Francisco, Vancouver, and Seattle, which require that the converted parking spaces remain open to the public, the Street Seats pilot program built only private café seating that business owners restricted to their own customers.

    The 2013 program allows public Street Seats sites and accepts applications from any businesses, neighborhood associations, and nonprofit groups.

    Seattle is in the process of creating a parklet pilot program through its department of transportation. Although the exact locations have yet to be announced, several parklets are being planned for Seattle’s Capitol Hill, Belltown, and Chinatown/International District neighborhoods.

    As UCLA’s Donald Shoup points out, “The upside of the mess we have made [with overabundant parking] is that we have an accidental land bank readily available.” From on-street bicycle parking to café seating, creative ideas for using public streets are spreading. Temporary oases such as PARK(ing) Day parks are inspiring people to think differently about on-street parking spaces, and permanent modifications such as parklets are providing welcoming gathering spaces in dense neighborhoods. As successful pilot initiatives blossom into long-term programs, we may yet see more vehicle parking spaces growing up to become people places.