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In Short

They Paved Paradise (Creek) and Put up a Parking Lot

parking lot of broken dreams
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If ever a housing development was ripe to cut down on parking spaces, it would be National City, California鈥檚 Paradise Creek.

The 201-unit, low-income housing complex is close to public transit. And National City is one of the densest, in the county.

Yet a push from the city to reduce parking spaces for the development and use the additional room for ride-sharing or infrastructure for electric vehicles never got off the ground.

The struggle reveals one of the region鈥檚 biggest challenges when it comes to providing affordable housing and encouraging the use of public transit.

The project in November, and it located just a few blocks away from a trolley station and multiple bus stops. It was one of only five projects nationwide awarded a from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and was the only housing project in San Diego County to receive state intended to promote low-income housing projects near public transit.

Months ago, Brad Raulston, the city鈥檚 executive director of planning and community development, approached the project鈥檚 developers, Community Housing Works and Related California, with an idea to reduce parking.

Reducing parking can lower costs for developers and leave space for additional housing units or other amenities. Some advocates of public transit and transit-oriented development it can also encourage the use of public transit.

But Raulston鈥檚 idea didn鈥檛 get far.

鈥淭his was a project where we had an opportunity to really move the needle,鈥 Raulston said. 鈥淏ut it just didn鈥檛 work out.鈥

Paradise Creek will have 308 parking spaces in a mix of surface parking and parking structures. That鈥檚 more than National City鈥檚 236-space minimum parking requirement for the area.

Developers say one reason the parking-reduction idea didn鈥檛 work is because it was floated too late in the process. The project had already been designed, permitted and was just about to break ground when Raulston and his colleagues started the parking discussions.

Any proposal to alter parking should have happened at the outset when it was easier to change the project design, said Michael Massie, the Paradise Creek project manager for Related.

鈥淥ne parking space can change where your sewer is going,鈥 said Carlos Aguirre, the Paradise Creek project manager for National City. 鈥淭he approval process is a monster for this.鈥

At the outset, National City, developers and the community had to prioritize other issues. The development was originally planned under the state鈥檚 redevelopment program, which helped cities rebuild rundown areas. But when redevelopment ended and the recession hit, the project was held up for years. They also had contaminated brownfields to clean up in the once heavy industrial area before they could build homes on the property.

鈥淭here was so much we had to deal with in this project during those middle years when we could have been focusing on the design,鈥 Aguirre said. 鈥淲e had to pick our battles.鈥

Another issue was that car-sharing programs like car2go weren鈥檛 interested in expanding into National City, said Raulston.

Then there鈥檚 the issue of marketability.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e a family choosing between Development A and Development B and the economics are the same, the project with more access to parking is going to be at an advantage,鈥 said Massie. 鈥淎s the culture changes and public transit becomes more a part of people鈥檚 lives that will become less true. You just don鈥檛 see that here yet.鈥

The apartments will be near public transit, said Aguirre. But that doesn鈥檛 mean the transit will fulfill people鈥檚 needs if they work in North County or other parts of San Diego not easily accessible by trolley and bus.

Carolina Martinez, a planner and policy advocate at the Environmental Health Coalition, wasn鈥檛 privy to the parking discussions, but works with the community members who advocated for building affordable housing on the property and participated in its planning process.

Access to transit was important for community members when they envisioned the development, she said. People often travel north to go to work and even to access medical services.

鈥淲hile there are people who have cars, there鈥檚 a lot of walking that happens in the community,鈥 Martinez said.

But there are still issues with transit. It doesn鈥檛 go everywhere people need to go or it takes hours to get there. Something like a car-sharing program integrated with parking would have likely been the best option for future residents, she said.

鈥淚n my mentality, I think people are willing to make a decision whether they want to give up their cars or pay for parking,鈥 Raulston said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 more complicated than that.鈥

There鈥檚 a Southern California stigma around buildings that don鈥檛 meet certain parking ratios, Raulston said.

鈥淭he problem is that we have expensive housing and free parking,鈥 said Donald Shoup, a professor of parking economics at UCLA鈥檚 Luskin School of Public Affairs. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the wrong way around.鈥

In a , Shoup estimated that, on average, one above-ground parking space costs $24,000 to construct. Underground spaces cost about $34,000 on average.

鈥淎 single parking space can cost far more to build than the net worth of many American households,鈥 Shoup wrote.

Shoup said that for low-income housing, the cost of providing parking becomes even more problematic. A lot of the subsidy for affordable housing goes toward parking, even when many of the families can鈥檛 take advantage of it because they don鈥檛 own cars, he said.

Aguirre said he thinks that if the cap-and-trade money, which helped fund Paradise Creek, had incentivized parking reductions, the city could have made a better sell to reduce parking. The state recently started a new affordable housing grant program with money from its cap-and-trade program revenue. The grants are meant to encourage smart growth by funding public-transit projects and low-income housing developments near public transit.

鈥淭here鈥檚 this whole discussion at the state level to try and incentive reducing our carbon footprint by funding affordable housing projects that are near public transportation lines, but they鈥檙e not asking for a reduction in parking,鈥 he said.

Aguirre said he鈥檚 currently fielding calls from the projects鈥 neighbors, who are already complaining about subcontractors parking on the street and in lots surrounding the property as construction moves forward.

鈥淚t鈥檚 already an issue,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ur dependence on the car is still our dependence on the car.鈥

Given that, he said, the project probably has just the right amount of parking.

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Maya Srikrishnan
They Paved Paradise (Creek) and Put up a Parking Lot