September 8, 2015Downtown, Featured, ParkingComments Off on 10th & Olive Parking Lot Loses One Entry; Fence Gains Height, Gate
It’s rare to see an owner of one of downtown’s many surface parking lots spend money making improvements, but for nearly a month now that has been the case at 10th & Olive.
Small private parking lot, 10th & Olive, provides parking for commercial spaces in two nearby buildings. 2013 photo.On August 12th I noticed work being done on the surface — it had been very uneven and not maintained. .By September 1st the iron fence was now taller. The 10th St entranced was now closed off.By September 4th they’d cut a pedestrian opening, The Olive St entry will be getting a gate so people needed a pedestrian route to get in/out.
Ideally, at some point in the future, this corner will once again have a multi-story building. In the meantime, these changes are welcomed — especially closing off the 10th Street entrance. Would be nice to see one additional on-street parking space added where the driveway was.
If you drive & park in an urban area you’ve likely received a parking ticket one time or another. So it’s no surprise that I frequently see tickets on vehicles on my trips to/from the grocery store 7 blocks East of my loft. Earlier this month I noticed the same vehicle parked in the same spot as the day before — with a ticket just like the day before. How unusual.
Thursday August 13th 11:21am, Eastbound Locust between 15th & 16th
Then I noticed a Parking Enforcement car park behind it. Maybe they’re about to boot it, I thought. I go to the corner and then across the street so I can get a good view. The woman from Parking Enforcement grabbed a blue bag out of the back seat of her official vehicle and walks toward the ticketed vehicle. I wasn’t expecting what happened next.
She opened the front door, unlocked the other doors, opened the back door and left the blue bag on the rear seat. She locks the doors at the front, returns to her official vehicle, drives off. Huh?
A Parking Enforcement Officer (PEO) takes a blue bag from her official vehicle and puts it in the backseat of the ticketed vehicle! Why? What’s in the bag? What started as a curiosity about a vehicle getting ticketed for parking in the exact same spot quickly became a curiosity about the connection between this vehicle, the PEO, and the contents of the blue bag.
Tuesday August 18 1:11pm
I thought by now the ticket had to be a decoy, but I needed proof.
Monday August 24th 12:59pm, on the way to the grocery storeAt 1:35pm I rolled back the envelope to conform the “ticket” was a blank.
I’ve documented the fake ticket, but I still needed the bag drop off.
At 3:19pm I’m across the street trying not to look conspicuous — as well as a shaved head guy in a wheelchair can.At 3:43pm the PEO is getting a blue bag out of her official vehicle.As before she walks to the other vehicle3:44pm she opens the driver’s doorWith the driver’s door still open she puts the blue bag in back. She closes the rear door and locked the doors from the front.3:45pm she’s back in her work vehicle about to pull away
At this point I feel I have enough to blog about my observations and report to Parking Enforcement and Treasurer Tishaura Jones. I still have unanswered questions: Is this her vehicle? Is she dropping off her gym bag for after work?
Two days later, Wednesday last week, I go to the grocery store and the vehicle isn’t there both times I pass by the space. Five minutes later I go out in front of my building to talk to someone — they’ve left but I can see the vehicle now parked there. I go down and see it has the fake ticket under the wiper — of course it does!
A man approaches me and starts yelling at me.
“Why you fucking with my car?”
“You’d better mind your own fucking business!”
Then something about being in a wheelchair. By this point I’m leaving — I felt threatened and vulnerable. But across Locust at 16th I turned to look back and take one more photo.
Wednesday August 26th at 12:51pm, the vehicle and guy who threatened me in the distance — he’s wearing a red shirt with white shorts & cap. .Here’s a blurry cropped view.
Given that I was threatened I called 911, the police looked at my photos to get the vehicle plate and city number on the parking enforcement car. They talked to the PEO supervisor. I then emailed the head of Parking Enforcement, Tishaura Jones, and her Chief of Staff — a reply said they’d investigate. At this point I don’t know anymore than you do.
At the very least this guy and the PEO were in cahoots with the fake ticket, but I think there’s much more to the story. When, and if, I find out I’ll let you know.
Parking still isn’t allowed in front of rain garden, so a lane of asphalt isn’t being used.
Still, now that the plants have matured it looks so much better.
November 2010August 2015
It collects water runoff from the sidewalk and adjacent surface parking lot, the more rain water we can keep out of the sewer system the better. I still see no reason why a parking space or two hasn’t been added to 11th Street.
The planning to reduce travel lanes from four to two on the three blocks of Washington Ave, from 18th to 21th, took place in 2007. The work was done in 2008. I was a paid consultant during the planning phase. At the time I lived in the Mt. Pleasant neighborhood and drove a motor scooter. In late 2007 I moved downtown and a few months later I had a stroke.
During the planning phase we debated angled parking — front-in vs. back-in. In 2007 I argued for front-in angled parking, which is how the street got striped. Since then the block West of Jefferson plus others toward Grand also reduced travel lanes with the addition of angled parking. But these blocks did back-in parking.
Front-in angled parking is much easier when it comes to parking your car but harder to see other motorists, motorcycles, or bicyclists when exiting the space. Last year we picked up friends at their loft at Washington Ave & Jefferson, I was driving and parked in a back-in space. I was nervous. but I did it first try. In hindsight I wish I’d argued for back-in parking initially.
Recently these blocks of Washington Ave were resurfaced and restriped — now with back-in parking. Let’s take a look:
Looking West from 18th — no parking zone at cornerWhile most do OK, clearly this person had trouble. Parking enforcement was writing a ticket as I took this pic.The adjacent vehicle also didn’t stay within the space
Out of 20+ cars only two weren’t within their respective spaces. Again, I wish I’d argued for this initially. The planning was prior to my being disabled, but I lobbied hard for good pedestrian crossings and disabled parking.
New “Continental” crosswalk at 19th is highly visible. Click image for article on Continental crosswalks.Unfortunately the mid-block crosswalks next to disabled parking wasn’t restriped.
Two and a half hours later I returned to check out a few more things, the white Ford was in the same spot.
An orange boot was on the front wheel, the Kia had moved over one space and parked correctly. While I was in the area Parking Enforcement came by and removed the boot, the waiting owner then drove off. .
Like most aspects of driving, backing into a parking space just takes practice to master. Occasionally I back into our space in our parking garage, it does get easier. Some day I may drive over to Washington Ave to practice — this wasn’t on my driver’s test in 1983.
A year ago the St. Louis Metropolitan Police moved from their old headquarters at Tucker & Clark to their new HQ on Olive, between 19th-20th. Back in April 2011 I wondered what would become of police-only parking on Clark between Tucker & 14th once the move happened. It seems nothing would happen.
Privately-owned vehicles now park where police vehicles used to park. July 23, 2015
The old police headquarters is, presumably, vacant. So who’s parking on Clark in spaces marked for “police vehicles only”? My guess is the police academy at Tucker & Spruce, just south of the old police HQ.
When the police left their old building the on-street parking on Clark should’ve become metered parking for the general public.
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