Skip to main content

US cities opt for variable-rate parking

Los Angeles and San Francisco are among the US cities opting to use variable-rate parking to make it easier to find a parking space. Los Angeles is piloting LA Express Park, program covering a 4.5 square-mile area of downtown using technology to match on-street parking prices with demand. The objective is to ensure that between 10 and 30 per cent of the parking spaces on each block are open throughout the day. Smart meters and sensors compile occupancy and payment data and based on that information, a pr
May 28, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Los Angeles and San Francisco are among the US cities opting to use variable-rate parking to make it easier to find a parking space.

Los Angeles is piloting LA Express Park, program covering a 4.5 square-mile area of downtown using technology to match on-street parking prices with demand. The objective is to ensure that between 10 and 30 per cent of the parking spaces on each block are open throughout the day. Smart meters and sensors compile occupancy and payment data and based on that information, a pricing algorithm recommends parking rates for various times of day that are designed to ensure that meters are used but that no area is too congested.

San Francisco’s SFpark dynamic parking system began in 2011. Used over a wider area of the city and also incorporating city-owned parking garages, it aims to achieve a consistent space-occupancy rate of about 85 per cent. It also applies special rates around AT&T Park during Giants baseball games.

Both systems offer free apps that provide users with real-time space-availability information.

According to parking expert Donald Shoup, a professor of urban planning at UCLA, these programs "reduce cruising, speed up buses, [and] reduce air pollution."

To keep pace with continuously changing parking demands, adjustments to LA Express Park rates take effect on the first Monday of each month and are made public in advance. SFpark rates change less frequently, no more than every other month.

In Los Angeles, pilot-wide rates have decreased by 11 percent but revenue is up by 2 percent, thanks to better utilisation of parking spaces and the increased rates in high-demand areas. The pattern has been similar in San Francisco.

Related Content

  • Xerox takes youthful view of future transport
    August 23, 2016
    Xerox’s David Cummins talks to Colin Sowman about the lessons for city authorities from its survey of younger peoples’ attitude to transport. There can be no better way to get a handle on the future of transport demand than to ask the younger generation about how they view and consume today’s transport. Sociologists have called this group Generation Z – those born between 1995 and 2007 – which will make up 40% of all US consumers by 2020.
  • MoceanLab discovers new Covid car-share use
    October 20, 2020
    The coronavirus pandemic has prompted some radical re-thinking of mobility services. Ben Spencer hears how MoceanLab car-share vehicles are delivering care to LA's homeless
  • Webinar: Mitigating post-Covid traffic congestion
    September 13, 2022
    Traffic congestion is nearly back to pre-Covid levels in top US downtowns - but it’s not too late to do something about it, says StreetLight
  • Will standardisation increase ITS interoperability?
    February 1, 2012
    Theoretical balance Kallistratos Dionelis, secretary general of ASECAP, comments on the European Commission's new ICT Standardisation Work Programme. I've just read a proposal from the European Commission on the 2010-2013 ICT Standardisation Work Programme. As ASECAP Secretary General this is one of my responsibilities. I work to receive information, to disseminate information and to build bridges and mutual understanding between policy-makers and the industrial world, between ASECAP and others.