At my current college, parking is annoying but not really a problem. The arts majors are pissed off because the entire lot in front of the fine arts hall is ALL designated 'visitor only' and residents, commuters, AND faculty can be ticketed for parking there. I tend to park in the far commuter lot. Yeah, it takes me 10-15 minutes to get across campus, but I always find a spot without having to circle.
My first college, though, had a severe parking problem. Actually, they had a severe space problem in general, to the point where the Greek houses were all worried that if they got out of line the school would take their houses and turn them into student housing apartments. Then along came buzzwords like 'biztech' and 'technogenesis' and suddenly the admin decided that the school must MAKE MONEY and open up a new major. And this new major must have a BRAND NEW and HIGH-TECH building of its own.
Right on the main campus parking lot.
They finally calmed down student outrage by promising that the new building would include multiple stories of parking, 2/3 for students and 1/3 for faculty, estimated to more than triple the amount of parking the original lot had held.
The city objected to the building. It was on the cliff overlooking the river, and did something-or-other to the skyline or something the students were never quite told. (It's New Jersey. We assumed the mayor or someone on the council wanted a huge bribe and the school didn't want to pay that much.) The school ignored them and built it anyway...but with 3 parking levels instead of the promised 7. The city responded by taking all the parking for itself. After much negotiation, the school was allowed to retain the top floor for faculty only.
Net parking change on campus? Loss of about a dozen spaces.
My first college, though, had a severe parking problem. Actually, they had a severe space problem in general, to the point where the Greek houses were all worried that if they got out of line the school would take their houses and turn them into student housing apartments. Then along came buzzwords like 'biztech' and 'technogenesis' and suddenly the admin decided that the school must MAKE MONEY and open up a new major. And this new major must have a BRAND NEW and HIGH-TECH building of its own.
Right on the main campus parking lot.
They finally calmed down student outrage by promising that the new building would include multiple stories of parking, 2/3 for students and 1/3 for faculty, estimated to more than triple the amount of parking the original lot had held.
The city objected to the building. It was on the cliff overlooking the river, and did something-or-other to the skyline or something the students were never quite told. (It's New Jersey. We assumed the mayor or someone on the council wanted a huge bribe and the school didn't want to pay that much.) The school ignored them and built it anyway...but with 3 parking levels instead of the promised 7. The city responded by taking all the parking for itself. After much negotiation, the school was allowed to retain the top floor for faculty only.
Net parking change on campus? Loss of about a dozen spaces.

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