Increasing Downtown parking not the answer
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It seems very odd that as a response to the traffic congestion in
Downtown Laguna, many advocate more parking.
It doesn’t follow that more places for people to park will lead to
less crowding on the roads.
No matter how much parking you add in Laguna there will likely
never be enough to provide for everyone who wants a space during the
summer.
City manager Ken Frank says the added parking Downtown will likely
ease parking in residential areas. People who normally park on the
streets on the outskirts of Downtown will be able to park in the lots
instead of in front of people’s homes, he argues.
That may be true. But it seems more likely that in the summer
people will fill up the new spaces and more people will pour in to
park on those residential streets. And most people will continue
preferring to park for free on the street than pay to park in a lot.
Also, the more people who come, the more traffic there will be. Of
course, while that could be bad for the streets, it would be good for
businesses.
Finding a way to ease traffic and keep businesses afloat seems to
be the trick. Providing a pleasant place for visitors to walk around
Downtown and keeping the trams available should assist getting people
into town and sticking around a while to shop.
A closed-off pedestrian walkway on Forest Avenue is a great idea
-- one that has been discussed for decades and is nowhere near a
reality. The Coastal Commission requires the city to replace any
public parking it removes, so if it does turn Forest Avenue into a
walkway it would have to make up for the lost parking.
A possible solution is the planned community center on Third
Street, where parking spaces are part of the proposal. Parking spaces
are also part of the plan for Village Entrance. These spaces could
make up for the ones lost on Forest.
Laguna has many of the right ingredients. The trams are an amazing
part of city. Providing them for free to travelers this year was a
nice touch -- free or not they are an important element. The
peripheral parking already available is helpful. That much of the
non-Downtown parking is long-term or even free is essential.
That is where the city should focus its efforts. Looking for
pockets of peripheral parking spaces along with some larger lots to
use would be better than adding more spaces, especially any large
lots in the Downtown area.
Maybe Laguna can be a rare example in Southern California that
public transportation done right can eliminate a lot of strife.
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