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The National Agricultural Library is one of four national libraries of the United States, with locations in Beltsville, Maryland and Washington, D.C. It houses one of the world's largest and most accessible agricultural information collections and serves as the nexus for a national network of state land-grant and U.S. Department of Agriculture field libraries. In fiscal year 2011 (Oct 2010 through Sept 2011) NAL delivered more than 100 million direct customer service transactions.

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Journal Article

期刊文章

Who’s been parking on my street? The politics and uneven use of residential parking space  [2018]

Taylor, Elizabeth Jean;

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Pressures on on-street residential parking in intensifying Australian cities are popularly ascribed to new higher density housing with insufficient off-street parking, underscoring calls to strengthen parking requirements in new developments. Despite the potential impacts of conventional minimum parking policies (on housing, land use, and transport patterns), there is no or little evidence of who uses residential on-street parking. Nor is there clear evidence of to what extent off-street parking, or requirements for it, actually offset on-street parking use. This study examines residential parking use in one Australian city, Melbourne, via two complementary sources: an existing travel survey of 8,994 households, and a custom online survey with 307 local responses. Although they have limitations, the two surveys provide new insight into where and by whom the use of on-street parking space around the home is more common.The study finds the majority (77–83%) of on-street residential parking use is by residents of detached housing. Most users of on-street parking have sufficient off-street parking, and half use garage space for storage or housing purposes. Residents of new flats and apartments account for disproportionately little on-street parking use, are excluded from on-street permits, and have closely controlled off-street parking spaces of which a third are unused. The paper argues uneven use of residential parking reflects household choices, and differi
ng rights to space embedded by zoning traditions that privilege lower density housing. Critical analysis is given both of the capability of conventional ‘predict and provide’ parking policies to manage residential parking, and to cope with urban change.
来自期刊
Land use policy
ISSN : 0264-8377

书目信息

语言:
English
类型:
Journal Article
自何时收录于AGRIS:
2019
出版者:
Elsevier Ltd
所有题名:
"Who’s been parking on my street? The politics and uneven use of residential parking space"@eng
其它:
"Pre-press version"
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书目信息

语言:
English
类型:
Journal Article
自何时收录于AGRIS:
2019
出版者:
Elsevier Ltd
所有题名:
"Who’s been parking on my street? The politics and uneven use of residential parking space"@eng
其它:
"Pre-press version"