Paved Paradise : How Parking Explains the World
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Shortlisted for the Zócalo Book PrizeNamed one of the best books of
the year by The New Yorker and The New Republic",Consistently
entertaining and often downright funny.",--The New Yorker",Wry and
revelatory.", --The New York Times",A romp, packed with tales of
anger, violence, theft, lust, greed, political chicanery and
transportation policy gone wrong . . . highly entertaining.",--The
Los Angeles TimesAn entertaining, enlightening, and utterly
original investigation into one of the most quietly influential
forces in modern American life--the humble parking spotParking,
quite literally, has a death grip on America: each year a shocking
number of Americans kill one another over parking spots, and we
routinely do ridiculous things for parking, contorting our
professional, social, and financial lives to get a spot. Since the
advent of the car, we have deformed our cities in a Sisyphean quest
for car storage, and as a result, much of the nation's most
valuable real estate is now devoted to empty vehicles. Parking
determines the design of new buildings and the fate of old ones,
traffic patterns and the viability of transit, neighborhood
politics and municipal finance, and the overall quality of public
space. Is this really the best use of our finite resources? Is
parking really more important than everything else?In a beguiling
and absurdly hilarious mix of history, politics, and reportage,
Slate staff writer Henry Grabar brilliantly surveys the nation's
parking crisis, revealing how the compulsion for car storage has
exacerbated some of our most acute problems-- from housing
affordability to the accelerating global climate disaster--and,
ultimately, how we can free our cities from parking's cruel yoke.