frequently asked question

What about parking? Won't new developments create massive congestion in our cities?

Parking is not a reason not to build. It is a reason to build differently. David Mepham's work, Rethinking Parking, offers insight into many good parking reforms, and the transit-oriented development championed by our flagship report, Melbourne's Missing Middle, enables people to live densely and connected to transport—reducing car-reliance and congestion in our cities. [Update: YIMBY Melbourne hosted David Mepham for a live discussion on Rethinking Parking which can be watched here].

One key advantage of density and densification is that it allows people to live near where they work, reducing their commute distance, and their use of road infrastructure.

YIMBY Melbourne strongly endorses the removal of mandatory parking minimums—a low-hanging fruit for housing affordability, and a policy change endorsed by Infrastructure Victoria and other leading policy and advocacy groups. 

Putting a specific number on the cost of parking, Merri-bek Council showed that each parking space added upwards of $56,000 to the cost of an apartmentmore than 10 months of wages for the median working Victorian. Meanwhile, RMIT researchers estimated in 2018 that up to 40 per cent of residential parking spaces in Melbourne are empty.

Under several existing planning schemes in metropolitan Melbourne, one- and two-bedroom apartments require a single car park each, and three-bedroom apartments require two car parks—meaning that family apartments are an estimated $112,000 more expensive due to parking minimums, which are applied regardless of whether the family owns any cars at all.

The lack of medium density near our vast public transit networks combined with the reliance on greenfield developments for housing may be a major factor for our current traffic congestion. There is research highlighting how pushing people further into car reliance is a primary contributor to this congestion. Denying people access to housing in high-demand areas only further encourages car reliance therefore increasing traffic congestion.

Your hottest YIMBY Queries, Answered

Frequently Asked Questions

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Are YIMBYs aligned with any political parties?
Aren't Melbourne apartments low-quality? Why do you want more of them?
Aren't tax concessions the biggest cause of the housing crisis? Why focus on zoning and planning?
Can't we just keep building greenfield/outer suburban developments?
Can't we just stop foreign investment to combat the housing crisis?
Can't we just stop immigration to solve the housing crisis?
Do you support stronger renter protections?
Doesn't new development just push poor people out of the city?
Don't high permit approval rates show that planning isn't the issue?
How does market-rate housing supply benefit those most in need?
Isn't zoning and planning reform just a giveaway to developers?
Local councillors are democratically elected representatives. What’s wrong with them having final decision-making powers over planning matters?
Loosening planning controls may result in more ugly modern buildings. Shouldn't new buildings be beautiful?
Shouldn't the local community get the final say on what happens in their "backyard"?
There are already so many apartments. Do we need more?
What about parking? Won't new developments create massive congestion in our cities?
What about those one million vacant homes?
What can we do about land banking?
What if I don’t want to live in an apartment?
What's the problem with building setbacks?
Why build denser cities? Isn't it better to decentralise?
Why can't the government just build public housing for all?
Why did rental prices go up during COVID?
Why do you hold councils accountable for housing supply delivery?
Why does YIMBY Melbourne have such a problem with heritage overlays?
Why doesn't YIMBY Melbourne endorse mandatory inclusionary zoning?