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Assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit-oriented development: a case study of “PT areas” in Cape Town

There has been a paradigm shift in thinking about parking provision, as government policy has favoured public transport and non-motorised transport (NMT), to limit and manage its supply in cities. This has been informed by sustainability principles, the understanding of “transit-oriented development...

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Main Author: Sasman, Nicola Anne
Other Authors: Behrens, Roger
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Civil Engineering 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sasman, Nicola Anne
author2 Behrens, Roger
author_browse Behrens, Roger
Sasman, Nicola Anne
author_facet Behrens, Roger
Sasman, Nicola Anne
author_sort Sasman, Nicola Anne
collection Thesis
description There has been a paradigm shift in thinking about parking provision, as government policy has favoured public transport and non-motorised transport (NMT), to limit and manage its supply in cities. This has been informed by sustainability principles, the understanding of “transit-oriented development” (TOD), and the “triple access” system thinking. This thinking has been applied in various ways in different cities, and its application in the literature is explored here, including case study lessons. This dissertation aims to answer the question: Recognising the current car-centric nature of the modern city (both in the Global North and South) on the one hand, and the sustainability and social equity imperatives on the other, can reduced parking provision and improved parking management be used to support the restructuring of the city over time, in support of public transport and of transit-oriented development? Cape Town is used as a case study, by assessing the effectiveness of the implementation of a tool adopted by the City of Cape Town, called “public transport areas” (“PT areas”), which allows reduced off-street parking supply in centres which are well-served by public transport. The research quantifies the number of parking bays not supplied as a result of the uptake of this PT offering, and locates this geographically. This was undertaken in 2 phases: the municipality conducted a pilot study of a small sample of centres, led by the author. The lessons learnt from this then informed the methodology for the full analysis, with the City providing the data to the author for analysis in her capacity as a student. The results of the quantitative research show that there was a significant nett saving of 9 662 parking bays in all centres, resulting in the freeing up of at least 18ha of developable land for more productive use. This does not include the additional gross lettable area potential created by reduced parking requirements, specific to each erf and land use. The research concludes that a tool such as the “PT offering” can have an impact on land use intensification, but its effectiveness is dampened if a good public transport system is not in place to enable positive travel behaviour change. It recommends that the moment is right, due to changing behaviour as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, for authorities to take actions to reduce parking demand and supply, and related management, in support of more people- and planet-orientated cities.civil
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37857
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:51:13.193Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Civil Engineering
publisherStr Department of Civil Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37857 Assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit-oriented development: a case study of “PT areas” in Cape Town Sasman, Nicola Anne Behrens, Roger civil engineering There has been a paradigm shift in thinking about parking provision, as government policy has favoured public transport and non-motorised transport (NMT), to limit and manage its supply in cities. This has been informed by sustainability principles, the understanding of “transit-oriented development” (TOD), and the “triple access” system thinking. This thinking has been applied in various ways in different cities, and its application in the literature is explored here, including case study lessons. This dissertation aims to answer the question: Recognising the current car-centric nature of the modern city (both in the Global North and South) on the one hand, and the sustainability and social equity imperatives on the other, can reduced parking provision and improved parking management be used to support the restructuring of the city over time, in support of public transport and of transit-oriented development? Cape Town is used as a case study, by assessing the effectiveness of the implementation of a tool adopted by the City of Cape Town, called “public transport areas” (“PT areas”), which allows reduced off-street parking supply in centres which are well-served by public transport. The research quantifies the number of parking bays not supplied as a result of the uptake of this PT offering, and locates this geographically. This was undertaken in 2 phases: the municipality conducted a pilot study of a small sample of centres, led by the author. The lessons learnt from this then informed the methodology for the full analysis, with the City providing the data to the author for analysis in her capacity as a student. The results of the quantitative research show that there was a significant nett saving of 9 662 parking bays in all centres, resulting in the freeing up of at least 18ha of developable land for more productive use. This does not include the additional gross lettable area potential created by reduced parking requirements, specific to each erf and land use. The research concludes that a tool such as the “PT offering” can have an impact on land use intensification, but its effectiveness is dampened if a good public transport system is not in place to enable positive travel behaviour change. It recommends that the moment is right, due to changing behaviour as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, for authorities to take actions to reduce parking demand and supply, and related management, in support of more people- and planet-orientated cities.civil 2023-04-28T14:03:48Z 2023-04-28T14:03:48Z 2022 2023-04-28T14:03:17Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37857 eng application/pdf Department of Civil Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle civil engineering
Sasman, Nicola Anne
Assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit-oriented development: a case study of “PT areas” in Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit-oriented development: a case study of “PT areas” in Cape Town
title_full Assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit-oriented development: a case study of “PT areas” in Cape Town
title_fullStr Assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit-oriented development: a case study of “PT areas” in Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit-oriented development: a case study of “PT areas” in Cape Town
title_short Assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit-oriented development: a case study of “PT areas” in Cape Town
title_sort assessing the effectiveness of reduced parking requirements in facilitating transit oriented development a case study of pt areas in cape town
topic civil engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37857
work_keys_str_mv AT sasmannicolaanne assessingtheeffectivenessofreducedparkingrequirementsinfacilitatingtransitorienteddevelopmentacasestudyofptareasincapetown