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On a 100-by-100 foot lot in Hoboken, New Jersey,
stands a parking garage that's only slightly
taller than a four-story rowhouse, yet which
holds, 324 vehicles-more than three times the
number that would fit into a conventional parking
ramp of that size. For Hoboken, a city with
nearly 30,000 people per square mile and with
few off-street parking spaces, the new Garden
Street Garage is a blessing. The question is
whether the New Jersey city's new garage foretells
the urban future.
The Garden Street Garage differs from 99.99
percent of America's parking structures in that
it is fully automated. You drive into an entrance
bay, leave the vehicle on a steel pallet, swipe
a card in front of a magnetic reader, and the
car is whisked away into the building's interior.
Come back hours or days later, and the car is
automatically delivered to you. There's no need
for you to drive through, searching for an open
space. Nor does the garage owner need to hire
attendants to park and retrieve vehicles. Computer-controlled
machinery runs the entire process.
Gerhard Haag, president of Robotic Parking
in Pinellas Park, Florida, thinks American cities
are on the cusp of constructing many automated
garages. The US contains 206 million vehicles,
he points out. As more people relocate to dense
urban settings, it will become imperative to
park vehicles more compactly. His firm designed
the Garden Street Garage, which squeezes seven
levels of parking into a building just 56 feet
high. The building's height, vertical proportions,
and brick exterior allow it to fit with the
old rowhouses on its block. Because the garage
contains no ramps or aisles and has minimal
headroom, it uses expensive urban space much
more efficiently than a conventional garage
or parking deck.
In Hoboken, the cost, excluding land, was $19,500
per parking space, Haag says. Depending on the
size and location elsewhere in the US, "cost
would range from $10,000 to $30,000 per parking
space," he estimates. Generally, an automated
garage cost more per parking spot than a conventional
garage.
Although the parking in the Hoboken garage
is entirely above ground, automated garages
can also be built below ground. Haag say use
of underground garages in the US has declined
dramatically in the past 20 years because people
find them scary. Automated garages eliminate
the discomfort, he says, since motorists do
no go beyond the entrance. An electro-mechanical
system with computerized controls stores the
cars on pallets and retrieves them quickly.
At the Hoboken garage, which opened in October
2002 and is operated by Robotic Parking, under
a contract with the Hoboken Parking Utility,
the average wait is 2.5 minutes.
Darius Sollonhub, who teaches infrastructure
planning at New Jersey Institute of Technology,
says automated garages "are fairly common
in Europe" and are also numerous in Japan.
In US cities possessing Hoboken's traits - a
high population density combined with high automobile
ownership - automated garages may be financially
feasible, Sollonhub believes. The primary obstacle,
he says, "is just the general concern about
new technology."
From an urbanistic perspective, automated garages
have numerous advantages: In addition to conserving
land, they don't emit fumes or generate much
noise, since there's no driving in their interiors.
They don't require windows and or much interior
lighting, and therefore are not brightly illuminated
empty hulks, the way conventional garages are
at night. The exterior of an automated garage
is apt to be lifeless, but at least it can be
designed to resemble neighboring buildings.
Retail could occupy some of the ground-level
street frontage.
Automated pallets stack cars in their places
. The exit looks like a normal. (see photos
above)
Gerhard Haag has been discussing proposals
for building automated garages in New York,
Miami, Boston, and elsewhere. The company's
web site is www.roboticparking.com.
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