The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms

In The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms, edited by Daniel Baldwin Hess, forty city planners, economists, journalists, and parking professionals analyze three major parking reforms proposed by Donald Shoup, a Distinguished Research Professor of Urban Planning at UCLA. First, remove off-street parking requirements. Second, use market prices to manage on-street parking. Third, spend the parking meter revenue to fund added public services on metered blocks. These parking reforms can align individual incentives with collective objectives and produce enormous benefits at low or no cost. All these benefits will result from subsidizing people, not parking. Shifting the cost of parking to the parkers will make cities more expensive for cars and more livable for people.

Shoup has spent his career encouraging everyone to rethink relationships between parking and the built environment, traffic congestion, energy consumption, and local economic development. This book celebrates Shoup’s decades-long contributions to research, practice, and education, and demonstrates how his ideas about how parking reform can support affordable housing development, lessen air pollution, and reduce automobile dependency.

This book will be of interest to urban planners, developers, elected officials, students, and citizen-advocates who are passionate about reducing automobile dependency and creating more sustainable and vital cities.

1147048513
The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms

In The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms, edited by Daniel Baldwin Hess, forty city planners, economists, journalists, and parking professionals analyze three major parking reforms proposed by Donald Shoup, a Distinguished Research Professor of Urban Planning at UCLA. First, remove off-street parking requirements. Second, use market prices to manage on-street parking. Third, spend the parking meter revenue to fund added public services on metered blocks. These parking reforms can align individual incentives with collective objectives and produce enormous benefits at low or no cost. All these benefits will result from subsidizing people, not parking. Shifting the cost of parking to the parkers will make cities more expensive for cars and more livable for people.

Shoup has spent his career encouraging everyone to rethink relationships between parking and the built environment, traffic congestion, energy consumption, and local economic development. This book celebrates Shoup’s decades-long contributions to research, practice, and education, and demonstrates how his ideas about how parking reform can support affordable housing development, lessen air pollution, and reduce automobile dependency.

This book will be of interest to urban planners, developers, elected officials, students, and citizen-advocates who are passionate about reducing automobile dependency and creating more sustainable and vital cities.

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The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms

The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms

by Daniel Baldwin Hess (Editor)
The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms

The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms

by Daniel Baldwin Hess (Editor)

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Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on August 28, 2025

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Overview

In The Shoup Doctrine: Essays Celebrating Donald Shoup and Parking Reforms, edited by Daniel Baldwin Hess, forty city planners, economists, journalists, and parking professionals analyze three major parking reforms proposed by Donald Shoup, a Distinguished Research Professor of Urban Planning at UCLA. First, remove off-street parking requirements. Second, use market prices to manage on-street parking. Third, spend the parking meter revenue to fund added public services on metered blocks. These parking reforms can align individual incentives with collective objectives and produce enormous benefits at low or no cost. All these benefits will result from subsidizing people, not parking. Shifting the cost of parking to the parkers will make cities more expensive for cars and more livable for people.

Shoup has spent his career encouraging everyone to rethink relationships between parking and the built environment, traffic congestion, energy consumption, and local economic development. This book celebrates Shoup’s decades-long contributions to research, practice, and education, and demonstrates how his ideas about how parking reform can support affordable housing development, lessen air pollution, and reduce automobile dependency.

This book will be of interest to urban planners, developers, elected officials, students, and citizen-advocates who are passionate about reducing automobile dependency and creating more sustainable and vital cities.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781040398883
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 08/28/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264

About the Author

Daniel Baldwin Hess is Professor in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning in the School of Architecture and Planning at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York. His research addresses interactions between housing, transportation, and land use with a view toward making cities more equitable and livable, and he is past winner of a Marie Skłodowska-Curie International Fellowship and Fulbright Scholar Award.

Table of Contents

In Memoriam & Donald Shoup, Renowned UCLA Urban Planner and Parking Reform Pioneer Foreword & Preface Part I. Introduction 1. The Shoup Dogma Part II. The Legacy of Donald Shoup as Researcher, Educator, and Mentor 2. A Research Topic is Born: Parking 3. A Planning Educator Intently Focused on Planning Practice 4. The Wit and Wisdom of Donald Shoup 5. Cracks in the Pavement Part III. Theories of Parking Reform 6. Practical Theory for Curb Parking 7. Parking Restraint: The Next Frontier in Parking Reform 8. The Price of Parking and Everything Else in Cities 9. The Shoup World and Transaction Costs 10. What about Women? 11. The Challenge of Eliminating Parking Requirements where Curb Parking is Free 12. Streetscapes without Curbside Parking 13. Parking, Urban Freight, and Curb Space Allocation for a Diversity of Uses 14. In Praise of On-Street Parking Part IV. Challenges and Successes of Implementing Parking Reform 15. Building a Movement for Parking Reform 16. The Message and the Messenger: How Donald Shoup Inspired a Generation of California Parking Reformers 17. Conversations with Donald Shoup on The Parking Podcast 18. Breaking up the Asphalt: The Growing Fight to End Parking Minimums 19. Minimum Versus Maximum Parking Requirements: Reflections on the Repeal of Parking Mandates in Buffalo 20. No Parking Minimums; Still So Much Parking; What Would Shoup Do? 21. Donald Shoup and San Francisco: Real-World Success for Parking Reform 22. The Theory of Parking Occupancy: Data versus Opinion 23. How the Shoupistas Changed my Downtown 24. Parking Reform: Habits and Traits that Resist it and Ways to Overcome Them 25. Donald Shoup’s Lasting Impact on the Parking Profession Part V. The International Reach of Parking Reforms 26. Parking Reform and Social Justice in Brazil 27. Post-Pandemic Parking Reforms in Europe 28. How Decades of Shoupian Parking Reformation Transformed Zürich 29. Professor Shoup’s Influence on Parking in Mexico City 30. Professor Shoup in China 31. Parking Optional: A New Era for Urban Planning in New Zealand 32. Melbourne, Los Angeles, and Donald Shoup’s Influence in Australia Part VI. Conclusion 33. A Golden Age of Parking Management Afterword: The Birth of a Doctrine

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