TrickyRicky
Senior Member
I'm sorry but no parking for residential buildings is just bad planning. It shouldn't be allowed for buildings above a certain number of units. It is not progressive, and does not make a city more liveable. We can discuss and be flexible about the number of spots per unit. I own residential property in the central city. You need about 1 parking spot in my experience for every 4 units even if none of your tenants have cars. That's right, even if no one has a car. That is because if you add up the sum of repairmen , deliveries, temporary parking, visitor parking, etc. any less than one spot per say four residential unit will start to create a parking deficit that will begin to impact the surrounding area. So unless the neighbourhood has surplus parking even car-less tenants need some number of spaces for the building to be parking neutral.
So if you scale up my theory to a large building you may not need a 1 - 4 ratio maybe it's 1-8 but the underlying issue still holds.
So if you scale up my theory to a large building you may not need a 1 - 4 ratio maybe it's 1-8 but the underlying issue still holds.