Parking: Decatur’s Savior of Businesses or Destroyer of Worlds?
Decatur Metro | January 17, 2010At first glance, it may seem that there are few local topics up for discussion as insanely boring as parking. But just try discussing it with your neighbor and you’ll quickly discover that “parking” is a volatile closet issue for many. Open that door and you may suddenly find yourself knee-deep in a personal struggle for “what is right” and “what is annoying.”
Here in Decatur, a walkable ‘burb fighting the influence of surrounding speedable sprawl, the issue takes on added weight and dimension.
For decades now, Decatur has bucked almost any developmental trend taken up by the rest of greater Atlanta. Back in the 1970s, when many of those same suburbs shunned MARTA, Decatur asked that the line be moved so it would cut straight through the center of the city. And while the Atlanta suburbs continued to crawl across the Georgia piedmont and into the mountains and swamps (circa 2008), Decatur looked towards greater density, shunning wider artery roads with highway-like speed limits in favor of street-narrowing.
But there’s one area where Decatur has a harder time ignoring the car-tendencies of greater Atlanta. Parking.