Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York City

Sidewalks and crosswalks do not benefit pedestrians if they are blocked by automobiles. In New York City, local media have documented that cars outside of law-enforcement offices routinely park on sidewalks and in crosswalks. This study systematically and longitudinally pursues this topic by trackin...

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Main Author: Marcel E. Moran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-05-01
Series:Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590198223000635
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author Marcel E. Moran
author_facet Marcel E. Moran
author_sort Marcel E. Moran
collection DOAJ
description Sidewalks and crosswalks do not benefit pedestrians if they are blocked by automobiles. In New York City, local media have documented that cars outside of law-enforcement offices routinely park on sidewalks and in crosswalks. This study systematically and longitudinally pursues this topic by tracking the geographic extent of this obstructive parking via in-person observation of the streets surrounding all 77 New York Police Department (NYPD) station houses, across all five boroughs. Combined with review of historical street imagery, this approach reveals widespread and longstanding parking on sidewalks, and to a lesser extent, in crosswalks. Of 77 NYPD station houses, 70 (91%) exhibited parking of at least one of these kinds, with sidewalk parking often extending along the entire block (and not simply in front of station houses), on adjacent blocks, and on both sides of the street. This renders many sidewalks impassable – forcing pedestrians into traffic – and in many cases directly abuts residences and businesses, curtailing access to such destinations. Longitudinally, such obstructive parking was present across 82% of 703 street-imagery data points, indicating this has largely become the default (and not occasional) use of adjacent sidewalks. In-person observation also demonstrated other ways this parking has had negative effects surrounding NYPD station houses, including double parking, obstruction of bus and bike lanes, and blocking of fire hydrants. These findings broaden the study of pedestrian accessibility and safety beyond the quality and design of sidewalks and intersections, to include chronic automotive obstruction, and indicate that parking behavior surrounding public-sector offices, if left unchecked, significantly degrades walkability.
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spelling doaj.art-f5ec32f88191407db5fd7b1b6ac9992f2023-05-23T04:22:02ZengElsevierTransportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives2590-19822023-05-0119100816Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York CityMarcel E. Moran0University of California, Berkeley Department of City and Regional Planning, 230 Bauer Wurster Hall #1820, Berkeley, CA 94720-1820, USASidewalks and crosswalks do not benefit pedestrians if they are blocked by automobiles. In New York City, local media have documented that cars outside of law-enforcement offices routinely park on sidewalks and in crosswalks. This study systematically and longitudinally pursues this topic by tracking the geographic extent of this obstructive parking via in-person observation of the streets surrounding all 77 New York Police Department (NYPD) station houses, across all five boroughs. Combined with review of historical street imagery, this approach reveals widespread and longstanding parking on sidewalks, and to a lesser extent, in crosswalks. Of 77 NYPD station houses, 70 (91%) exhibited parking of at least one of these kinds, with sidewalk parking often extending along the entire block (and not simply in front of station houses), on adjacent blocks, and on both sides of the street. This renders many sidewalks impassable – forcing pedestrians into traffic – and in many cases directly abuts residences and businesses, curtailing access to such destinations. Longitudinally, such obstructive parking was present across 82% of 703 street-imagery data points, indicating this has largely become the default (and not occasional) use of adjacent sidewalks. In-person observation also demonstrated other ways this parking has had negative effects surrounding NYPD station houses, including double parking, obstruction of bus and bike lanes, and blocking of fire hydrants. These findings broaden the study of pedestrian accessibility and safety beyond the quality and design of sidewalks and intersections, to include chronic automotive obstruction, and indicate that parking behavior surrounding public-sector offices, if left unchecked, significantly degrades walkability.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590198223000635ParkingPedestriansGISPlanning
spellingShingle Marcel E. Moran
Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York City
Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Parking
Pedestrians
GIS
Planning
title Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York City
title_full Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York City
title_fullStr Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York City
title_full_unstemmed Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York City
title_short Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York City
title_sort authorized vehicles only police parking and pedestrian access in new york city
topic Parking
Pedestrians
GIS
Planning
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590198223000635
work_keys_str_mv AT marcelemoran authorizedvehiclesonlypoliceparkingandpedestrianaccessinnewyorkcity