Skip to Content
Streetsblog USA home
Streetsblog USA home
Log In
Parking Madness 2018

Lansing Is Your 2018 Parking Madness Champion!

In the last few weeks we've gotten to know 16 ugly asphalt wastelands overrun by surface parking. But only one city (per year) can emerge victorious from the Parking Madness bracket and win the Golden Crater™. Our readers have spoken, and this year that city is Lansing, Michigan.

The state government complex in downtown Lansing beat out the area around the Long Island Railroad station in Hicksville, New York, to claim the championship.

Congrats, sort of, to Lansing -- it's a deserving winner!

In the true spirit of Parking Madness, Lansing's parking crater stretches out for acres in the middle of town. While there's a healthier downtown area east of the state capitol, make no mistake: This is a large, center city employment cluster where surface parking has metastasized to an outrageous extent.

golden_crater_2018

The parking crater complex is home to the state capitol and various appendages of state government, including Michigan DOT headquarters.

Commenting on the championship match, reader Nick Helmholdt told us he used to have a state job and commute to this very crater. The parking situation is even more extreme than the satellite view lets on, he says, because below the surface are fields of underground parking. It's a different story for bike parking though: Helmholdt often commuted by bicycle, but there were no bike racks, so he had to lock up to a hand rail.

The real estate market is soft around the state office complex, and these parking lots won't get redeveloped with the wave of a hand. Helmholdt says the urban design in this area is basically set up to suffocate street life:

It would take a lot more than simply redeveloping underutilized asphalt to make this portion of Lansing an attractive investment. Many of the State's office buildings in this area have terrible street frontages. My colleagues joked that the architectural style of our building was "neo-penal". Large portions of the office complex are grade separated from the street. (You never have to cross a street at grade along the half-mile path between the Hall of Justice and the State Capitol.)

Interesting backstory: We actually received two parking crater nominations in Lansing this year. The other was by the riverfront and could have gone far.

We've been contacted by the Lansing State Journal about the competition and look forward to the local coverage of Lansing's victory.

Last year's winner -- Denver -- is making moves to redevelop its parking crater. Maybe Lansing will take steps to end the parking madness and make the area around Michigan's seat of government more hospitable for human beings.

parking_madness_2018

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog USA

Should Wednesday’s Headlines 86 SUVs?

American tax law encourages people to buy the gas-guzzling and deadly vehicles, but some in Canada are pushing to ban them.

April 24, 2024

Tuesday’s Headlines Fix It First

How voters incentivize politicians to ignore infrastructure upkeep. Plus, are hydrogen trains the future of rail or a shiny distraction?

April 23, 2024

Why We Can’t End Violence on Transit With More Police

Are more cops the answer to violence against transit workers, or is it only driving societal tensions that make attacks more frequent?

April 23, 2024

Justice Dept., Citing Streetsblog Reporting, Threatens to Sue NYPD Over Cops’ Sidewalk Parking

The city is now facing a major civil rights suit from the Biden Administration if it doesn't eliminate illegal parking by cops and other city workers.

April 22, 2024

Five Car Culture Euphemisms We Need To Stop Using

How does everyday language hide the real impact of building a world that functionally requires everyone to drive?

April 22, 2024
See all posts