Many cities throughout the Bay Area and beyond are working on managing the limited resource that is public parking. For the purposes of this Plan, a couple examples that may be helpful for Menlo Park to reference include, but are not limited to, Burlingame and San Carlos.
Burlingame
Downtown Burlingame parking strategies are designed to keep the area vibrant and welcoming for shoppers, residents, and employees while supporting walking, biking, and transit. The approach treats parking as a shared resource that works alongside Downtown’s businesses, housing, and public spaces. One key strategy is shared parking, recognizing that uses such as offices and restaurants are complementary and often have peak parking demands at different times of day. By allowing these uses to share the same spaces, fewer total stalls are needed, which reduces circling and congestion.
Burlingame also connects parking management to its broader goal of designing streets for people. Safer bike routes, wider sidewalks, and flexible curb areas that give curb space more than one purpose. Instead of curb spaces being used only for parking, these areas can support bike racks, street trees and landscaping, or other community needs depending on the time of day.
Another strategy is the implementation of smart parking meters, which help ensure turnover, improve access, and make it easier for visitors to find available spaces.
San Carlos
San Carlos is rethinking how parking and transportation fit into the city’s long-term growth, housing, and climate goals. Through its transportation demand management (TDM) and parking regulations, San Carlos is updating parking rules and travel demand strategies. This project is guided by community input, regional and state policy, and advisory and decision-making bodies.
San Carlos is developing a Shared Parking Strategy to create “park-once” districts as part of this effort. These districts let people leave their cars in one space and walk to multiple destinations rather than re-parking several times. This makes public parking more efficient and reduces downtown traffic.
San Carlos is also working to make better use of its existing parking supply. Recent steps include updating enforcement hours, revisiting the in-lieu fees developers pay instead of providing on-site parking, and exploring new technologies, such as license plate readers and pavement sensors, to track turnover and improve enforcement without immediately turning to installing new parking meters.