Amsterdam will eliminate 11,000 parking spots for cars
This
week, Amsterdam is taking its reputation for pro-bike, anti-car polices
one step further by announcing that it will systematically strip its
inner city of parking spaces.
Amsterdam transit commissioner Sharon Dijksma announced Thursday that
starting this summer, the city plans to reduce the number of people
permitted to park in the city core by around 1,500 per year. These
people already require a permit to access a specific space (and the cost
for that permit will also rise), and so by reducing these permits
steadily in number, the city will also remove up to 11,200 parking spaces from its streets by the end of 2025.
The cleared spaces won’t be left empty, however. As room for cars is
removed, it will be replaced by trees, bike parking, and wider
sidewalks, allowing Amsterdammers to instantly see and feel the benefits
of what will still be a fairly controversial policy among drivers.
How can the city get away with it? Put simply, Amsterdam’s government
has been given a mandate to. The city is currently being run by a
coalition of left and centrist parties in which the Green Left party (GroenLinks)
has the largest share. A promise to reduce parking space formed part of
the initial coalition agreement. It also helps that no driver will
actually be stripped of the right to park. Rather than revoking permits,
the city will simply not replace any that are given up when drivers
leave the city, give up their cars, or die. In this way, the city
reckons it can naturally do away with about 1,100 permits a year.
More at CityLab, via Neatorama
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