The Arbor Day Foundation is pledging 10 million trees to areas impacted by hurricanes Helene, Milton Help us replant
Bulletin
Trees and Parking Lots
Along with our marriage to the automobile has come its unpleasant relative — the parking lot. Approximately 10% of the surface in urban areas is dedicated to this storage space for cars, and its impact on the character of a community is significant. But with creative landscaping and the use of trees, there is no reason why parking lots can’t offer multiple benefits instead of visual blight.
Sometime in the 1920s, the automobile worked its way firmly into the fabric of American life.
It became the very focal point of urban family life, with one classic study finding that most people said they were more willing to mortgage their homes and deplete their life savings than to give up their cars.
Today, the car has evolved from a mere means of enjoyment and personal freedom to an absolute necessity for work and play. More than 282 million cars now prowl our streets and byways, more than double the number present in the latter part of the 20th century. Millions more are added each year by foreign and domestic factories. More than 90% of all U.S. households have a car, with most owning more than one.
With this magnitude of national obsession, it is not surprising that there are few things more challenging than trying to separate Americans from their cars. This fact of life has confounded mass transit planners, frustrated national park managers, and definitely not escaped the notice of merchants and others who need to attract customers.
Parking lots are here to stay. The mention of closing one, converting it to another use, or even reducing the number of stalls is a clarion call to battle with merchants, faculty, workers, or others who use the lot. Still, is it necessary for so much of our community to be a barren sea of asphalt?
In the pages that follow, a case is made for sharing parking lots with trees. When this is done, parking lots become multifaceted for any business, institution, or community. Parking lots with trees can attract business, enhance the workplace, and uplift the quality of life in your community.
In This Bulletin
Here’s what’s inside:
- Designing with Trees – the benefits of planning a parking lot that incorporates trees
- Remember the Roots – accounting for the health of the tree below ground
- Making a Good Design Better – small design adjustments that can have big impact
- More Design Tips – examples of integrating trees into different scenarios
- Chicago’s ‘Green Alleys’ – one city putting trees to work throughout its alleyways