My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Browse
Search
Res13 15305
RedwoodCity
>
City Clerk
>
Resolutions
>
City Council
>
Working
>
2010-2019
>
Res13 15305
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
10/11/2019 7:50:59 AM
Creation date
10/11/2019 7:50:44 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
CC Index
CC Index - Document Type
Resolution
Meeting Type
Special
Agency Type
City Council
Date
11/18/2013
Description
RESOLUTION DENYING THE APPEAL BY 605 MIDDLEFIELD ROAD LLC, AND MODIFYING THE SEPTEMBER 3, 2013 PLANNING COMMISSION ACTIONS, TO APPROVE THE TENTATIVE MAP, CONDOMINIUM PERMIT, PLANNED DEVELOPMENT PERMIT AND PLANNED COMMUNITY PERMIT, THE 525 MIDDLEFIELD ROAD PROJECT AS REVISED ON NOVEMBER 8, 2013, ALL PURSUANT TO THE CITY OF REDWOOD CITY'S DOWNTOWN PRECISE PLAN AND SUBDIVISION ORDINANCE
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
57
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
11/18/2013 CAPCOA <br /> • • • <br /> PDT-3 Parking Policy/ Pricing <br /> PM 2.8—5.5% of running <br /> CO 2.8—5.5% of running <br /> NOx 2.8—5.5% of running <br /> SOZ 2.8—5.5% of running <br /> ROG 1.7—3.3% of total <br /> Discussion: <br /> The range of parking price increases should be a minimum of 25% and a maximum of <br /> 50%. The minimum is based on Moving Cooler [1] discussions which state that a less <br /> than 25% increase would not be a sufficient amount to reduce VMT. The case study [2] <br /> looked at a 50% price increase, and thus no conclusions can be made on the elasticities <br /> above a 50% increase. This strategy may certainly be implemented at a higher price <br /> increase, but VMT reductions should be capped at results from a 50% increase to be <br /> conservative. <br /> Example: <br /> Assuming a baseline on-street parking price of$1, sample calculations are provided <br /> below: <br /> • Low Range °/a VMT Reduction (25% increase) _ ($1.25 - $1)/$1 * 0.11 = 2.8% <br /> • High Range % VMT Reduction (50% increase) _ ($1.50 - $1)/$1 * 0.11 = 5.5% <br /> Preferred Literature: <br /> • -0.11 parking demand elasticity with respect to parking prices <br /> The Clinch & Kelly study (2] of parking meters looked at the impacts of a 50% price <br /> increase in the cost of on-street parking. The case study location was a central on- <br /> street parking area with a 3-hour time limit and a mix of business and non-business <br /> uses. The study concluded the parking increases resulted in an estimated average <br /> price elasticity of demand of-0.11, while factoring in parking duration results in an <br /> elasticity of-0.2 (cost increases also affect the amount of time cars are parked). <br /> Though this study is international (Dublin, Ireland), it represents a solid study of parking <br /> meter price increases and provides a conservative estimate of elasticity compared to <br /> the alternate literature. <br /> Alternative Literature: <br /> Alternate: <br /> • -0.19 shopper parking elasticity with respect to parking price <br /> • -0.48 commuter parking elasticity with respect to parking price <br /> 215 PDT-3 <br /> 9 RESO.#15305 <br /> MUFF#603 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.