
UCLA Housing Voice Ep 22: How Housing Shapes Transportation Choices with Adam Millard-Ball
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Mar 16, 2022 Adam Millard-Ball, an Associate Professor of Urban Planning, delves into the dynamic interplay between housing and transportation. With groundbreaking research from San Francisco's housing lottery, he reveals how reduced parking leads to decreased driving and increased transit use. Millard-Ball explains the powerful influence of parking availability over transit quality on travel behavior and argues for revising parking mandates to enhance housing affordability. He highlights that even in parking-free buildings, car ownership persists, yet driving decreases due to higher costs and inconvenience.
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Built Environment Affects Travel Choices
- Built-environment features like transit quality and parking correlate with less driving, but causality was unclear due to self-selection.
- Millard-Ball's study uses a housing lottery to isolate causal effects and shows environment itself changes travel behavior.
Freeway Removal Turned Into Housing
- San Francisco removed an elevated freeway and used the right-of-way for housing, including affordable units.
- Interim uses included an urban farm before housing was built, showing creative reuse.
Remove Parking Minimums To Lower Costs
- Reform parking requirements to avoid forcing developers to build unneeded parking that raises housing costs.
- Let market and design choices, not blanket minimums, determine how much parking gets built.
