With as much as 39% of downtown real estate devoted to surface spaces for cars, advocates say it’s time to junk Asheville’s minimum parking requirements

The dense, diverse and affordable future Marty Benson imagines for his neighborhood, he said, can only be unlocked if the city of Asheville eliminates minimum parking requirements.

Benson, a land-use lawyer and affordable housing advocate, stood outside his West Asheville home last week and pointed to the adjacent and mostly empty Michigan Street, where he has counted 220 on-street spaces on seven blocks south of Haywood Road.

With all that capacity, he said, there’s no need for the city mandate to build at least one off-street parking space – usually a slab of concrete or asphalt – for every new residential unit, Benson said.

Getting rid of this rule, along with equally “asinine” minimum lot-size requirements, would free up land for people instead of cars, he said. Property owners could build four-, five-, or six-unit apartment buildings instead of the 2,000-plus-square-foot, $500,000-plus homes that seem to be filling every available lot in West Asheville…

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