Better Urban Living Through Parking Solutions

by Sep 11, 2018Mobility, Technology

Jason Schulz

Jason Schulz works in Verizon’s Smart Communities organization as a Product Manager overseeing the Parking solution. Before joining Verizon, Jason spent over 20 years in transportation working for Lexus, Toyota and INRIX.


Who will you meet?

Cities are innovating, companies are pivoting, and start-ups are growing. Like you, every urban practitioner has a remarkable story of insight and challenge from the past year.

Meet these peers and discuss the future of cities in the new Meeting of the Minds Executive Cohort Program. Replace boring virtual summits with facilitated, online, small-group discussions where you can make real connections with extraordinary, like-minded people.


 

It’s the end of a long week. You and your better half are due for a much-needed date night. The kids are with the sitter, the car is washed, and the mood is set. Dressed to the nines, the two of you drive downtown where you’ve scored reservations at the hottest restaurant. You leave plenty early to account for the time it’ll take to find parking.

But apparently, not early enough. It took twice as long to find a spot, and half a mile away from the restaurant at that. You finally arrive, late, sweaty and frazzled. The hostess shakes her head as she motions to the wait-listed couple who took your table.

Does it really have to be like that?

The growing problem of scarce parking doesn’t just ruin your dinner plans (though that’s reason enough for a change). People cruising the streets for places to park add unnecessary traffic to the already congested roads; and combined with taxis and ride-sharing cars dropping off passengers and patrolling for fares, vehicle density in city centers is only getting worse.

With 88% of U.S. commuters using private vehicles, and millions on the roads at the same time of the day, streets don’t have the capacity to efficiently handle the demand for more space. And when 30% of traffic congestion in downtown areas is cars looking for parking, solving the parking problem will go a long way toward easing overall gridlock; especially when much of this problem is a result of lack of information. Had you known there were a handful of available spots on a side street merely one block away from the restaurant, you wouldn’t have spent that extra twenty minutes searching in vain.

 

Providing Real Time Information About Available Parking

Smarter technology can help. Currently available parking solutions can detect when vehicles are entering or leaving spaces and combine pricing data from city-owned and private spaces, then share that information with drivers looking for available spaces to make navigation and parking decisions faster while easing traffic congestion.

Parking information can be integrated into existing applications, such as MapQuest, to steer drivers toward open parking. Getting better information into the hands of drivers will help cities make the most of their highest-valued real estate: on-street parking spaces.

 

Benefits for Cities and Private Parking Owners

Cities and private parking owners can use parking analytics to create policies and rates, adapting them to changing conditions or shifts in demand. Parking analytics help managers better understand pricing and maximize revenue in different parts of the city. This can also be adjusted for special events or if new businesses move into a location.

Parking managers can use historical and current availability and events to help decide when to expand or contract available parking, to enforce violations, and optimize staffing and associated services.

A cloud-based solution can easily transmit that information to those who need it and can be continually upgraded and modified to adapt to changing needs.

 

The Future of Intelligent Parking

The World Economic Forum estimates that 48% of parking spaces will change function once autonomous vehicles (AV) are widely in use. But in order to know how a parking space will change its function it’s important to know how it was being used in the first place—drop-offs, pickups, short-term parking, long term parking, etc.—data that an intelligent parking solution can accurately provide. For example, many parking operators are beginning to reimagine their spaces by becoming more of a transit hub that supplies locations for pickups and drop-offs (to accommodate AV) as well as parking.

It will take investments from cities, private parking lot operators and car makers to integrate parking and traffic information to ease congestion, optimize city resources and ease mobility. Yet the power of delivering real-time information creates significant benefits for everyone using city streets.

 

Fast-Forward to a Smarter City

It’s taken six months to get another reservation at the hottest restaurant in town, but this time the city has helped you prepare. Your car app shows you an accurate map where you see the location of seven open spots within a block away. You arrive in style with time to spare. As you and your better half toast a drink at the bar, you serendipitously meet the celebrity chef, who treats you to his latest kitchen masterpiece.

Life is good with better parking.

For more information, please check out verizonenterprise.com/parking.

Discussion

Leave your comment below, or reply to others.

Please note that this comment section is for thoughtful, on-topic discussions. Admin approval is required for all comments. Your comment may be edited if it contains grammatical errors. Low effort, self-promotional, or impolite comments will be deleted.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Read more from MeetingoftheMinds.org

Spotlighting innovations in urban sustainability and connected technology

Middle-Mile Networks: The Middleman of Internet Connectivity

Middle-Mile Networks: The Middleman of Internet Connectivity

The development of public, open-access middle mile infrastructure can expand internet networks closer to unserved and underserved communities while offering equal opportunity for ISPs to link cost effectively to last mile infrastructure. This strategy would connect more Americans to high-speed internet while also driving down prices by increasing competition among local ISPs.

In addition to potentially helping narrow the digital divide, middle mile infrastructure would also provide backup options for networks if one connection pathway fails, and it would help support regional economic development by connecting businesses.

Wildfire Risk Reduction: Connecting the Dots

Wildfire Risk Reduction: Connecting the Dots

One of the most visceral manifestations of the combined problems of urbanization and climate change are the enormous wildfires that engulf areas of the American West. Fire behavior itself is now changing.  Over 120 years of well-intentioned fire suppression have created huge reserves of fuel which, when combined with warmer temperatures and drought-dried landscapes, create unstoppable fires that spread with extreme speed, jump fire-breaks, level entire towns, take lives and destroy hundreds of thousands of acres, even in landscapes that are conditioned to employ fire as part of their reproductive cycle.

ARISE-US recently held a very successful symposium, “Wildfire Risk Reduction – Connecting the Dots”  for wildfire stakeholders – insurers, US Forest Service, engineers, fire awareness NGOs and others – to discuss the issues and their possible solutions.  This article sets out some of the major points to emerge.

Innovating Our Way Out of Crisis

Innovating Our Way Out of Crisis

Whether deep freezes in Texas, wildfires in California, hurricanes along the Gulf Coast, or any other calamity, our innovations today will build the reliable, resilient, equitable, and prosperous grid tomorrow. Innovation, in short, combines the dream of what’s possible with the pragmatism of what’s practical. That’s the big-idea, hard-reality approach that helped transform Texas into the world’s energy powerhouse — from oil and gas to zero-emissions wind, sun, and, soon, geothermal.

It’s time to make the production and consumption of energy faster, smarter, cleaner, more resilient, and more efficient. Business leaders, political leaders, the energy sector, and savvy citizens have the power to put investment and practices in place that support a robust energy innovation ecosystem. So, saddle up.

The Future of Cities

Mayors, planners, futurists, technologists, executives and advocates — hundreds of urban thought leaders publish on Meeting of the Minds. Sign up to follow the future of cities.

You have Successfully Subscribed!

Wait! Before You Leave —

Wait! Before You Leave —

Subscribe to receive updates on the Executive Cohort Program!

You have Successfully Subscribed!

Share This