• 🍉 DrRedOctopus 🐙🍉@lemmy.world
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    25 minutes ago

    central park is 843 acres, and an acre can fit about 130 parking stalls. That means 109590 parking spots, lets say they rent them out for about 50$ per day (I paid that much when I had to park in Manhattan once). that would make 5.5 million $ per day or about 2 billion per year.

    According to wikipedia (the study linked is now offline), Central park has a revenue of about 656 million $.

    If we paved all central park and make it into a parking lot that extra 1.4B$ could be redistributed to everyone in Manhattan, everyone would get a 1204$ cheque every year.

    Which they could spend on a vacation to see trees.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Neat, but this is off scale by a factor of about two thirds. Central Park is roughly half a mile wide which means at typical spacing you should be able to fit 330 parking spaces per row. Let’s call it an even 300 to be extremely charitable with the aisle down the middle and access ways down both sides. I counted 93 or so (it’s a bit muddy) spaces in the closest row that’s not clipped by the edges of the frame.

    So not only did some asshole pave over Central Park, but apparently it’s being exclusively used for monster truck parking.

    • BonsaiBoo@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      That actually sounds like exactly what would happen if the confederacy gains control of New York

    • Dettweiler@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago

      Don’t forget your landscape buffers every so many spaces, to account for all the impermeable surface. I don’t know the requirements for New York, but on average it’s every 10-15 spaces. Granted, they can always file for an exemption, like Wal Mart.

      • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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        2 hours ago

        Is this requirement mainly due to drainage or something else? (I’m guessing “just to make things look nicer” isn’t why?)

        • Dettweiler@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 hours ago

          It’s a combination of drainage and allowing some rainwater to flow into the water table. If I recall correctly, areas with limestone aquifers are going to require more permeable space.

      • Foxfire@pawb.social
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        5 hours ago
        1. Build giant parking lot with AI powered variable metered pricing.
        2. Offer rent pricing for people who live in their cars, so they can finally have a piece of New York too.
        3. Build giant data center underground with pond cooling, Charge people to swim in the now heated pond as a premium feature.
        4. Heat from data center melts snow, so the parking spaces are always clear in the winter. Get massive tax rebate for this service.
    • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Seriously: send it all straight into the Hudson River. Who needs “detention ponds” to “offset flood risk”?

      (Also, I know this is AI slop, but what’s up with those downright columnar towers in the background? 😭)

  • yermaw@sh.itjust.works
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    5 hours ago

    “That was Big Yellow Taxi by Joni Mitchell, a song in which Joni complains that they paved paradise to put up a parking lot, a measure which actually would have alleviated traffic congestion on the outskirts of paradise, something which Joni singularly fails to point out, perhaps because it doesn’t quite fit in with her blinkered view of the world. Nevertheless, nice song.”

  • John@lemmy.ml
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    4 hours ago

    This is literally what Grant Park at the north end in Chicago looked like until they built millennium Park