INCREASED PARKING
ENFORCEMENT BEGINS FRIDAY, JULY 1
City of Knoxville and Public Building Authority officials
remind visitors to downtown and to the Cumberland Avenue Corridor that a number
of changes related to garage and on-street parking will take effect on Friday,
July 1.
As part of a comprehensive approach to managing public
parking in downtown and in Fort Sanders, the City is installing more than 1,000
new parking meters, adjusting rates for on-street and garage parking, and
increasing parking enforcement.
The goal is to create more turnover of parking spaces in
high-demand areas. The ideal occupancy rate for parked cars in short-term
metered spaces is 85 percent in a prime city block – meaning that a motorist
should be able to find a parking space within a block or so of his or her
destination.
In the Cumberland Avenue Corridor, PBA officers also will
be enforcing 30-minute limits in designated commercial loading zones as well as
discouraging drivers of commercial vehicles from parking illegally on sidewalks
or in other non-designated areas.
Starting July 1, PBA will be assigning six officers to
enforce parking regulations throughout downtown. In addition, four PBA officers
will be handling parking enforcement in the Cumberland Avenue area. (Affected
streets in the Cumberland Avenue Corridor include Cumberland, White and Lake
avenues; Melrose Place; and Mountcastle, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st and 22nd
streets.)
In March, City Council approved the purchase of 1,022 new
solar-powered parking meters. The new meters will accept credit cards or
change, and will include sensors that will enable City engineers to track
actual usage of street parking spaces.
As the meters are installed, uniform sets of short- and
long-term rates will go into effect that encourage short-term use of
high-demand street parking and long-term parking by commuters and residents in
the City’s parking garages or in metered spaces on the edges of downtown.
Public garage parking will remain free on weekends and
after 6 p.m. on weekdays.
“There’s plenty of parking downtown, and about 90 percent
of it – more than 7,500 spaces – is in garages and City-owned lots,” Downtown
Coordinator Rick Emmett said. “That’s clearly the best option for long-term
parking.
“Short-term parkers – those visiting offices, shops and
restaurants – might prefer the convenience of on-street parking, but most
spaces are limited to two hours. The short-term meters will charge $1.50 an
hour, versus $1 an hour to park in a garage.
“The new parking management plan will ensure regular
turnover, and it’s also a more equitable way of sharing a public resource.”
Among the planned changes taking effect:
n New meters will be installed throughout downtown, including
the length of Gay Street from Summit Hill Drive to Hill Avenue that does not
currently have meters.
n The meters will be in effect Monday through Saturday
throughout downtown, from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Gay Street and around Market
Square, and from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. everywhere else.
n Long-term meters (on the north end of the Gay Street
Viaduct and along Depot Avenue and South Central Street) will charge 30 cents
an hour, with a 10-hour limit.
n City-owned garages will continue to be free on weekends and
after 6 p.m. on weekdays, and will continue to charge $1 an hour for parking during
weekdays. Monthly parking rates at City-owned garages will rise by $5 a month.
n The monthly parking rate for weekday commuters at the Civic
Coliseum parking garage will decrease to $15 a month, from its current level of
$20 a month. (New trolley routes provide free service from the Coliseum garage
every 7 to 8 minutes on weekdays. The garage is also only a 5-minute walk from
Gay Street.)
n In addition to its downtown enforcement, PBA will enforce
meters in the Cumberland Avenue District, between White Avenue and Lake Avenue
from 17th Street west to the railroad tracks from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to
Saturday (but not on home football game days).
Violators parking in commercial loading zones or no-parking
zones will be subject to immediate towing, as will motorists with multiple
outstanding tickets for meter violations.
Any funds
generated from parking activities will be used to support parking infrastructure
and downtown amenities. For more information about public parking in Knoxville,
visit http://www.knoxvilletn.gov/parking.
Thanks for your continued interest and have a great week!
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