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| © Mark Bialek |
posted 11/10/2012
Asked how he likes the new Library Lane parking structure, neighbor Herb David replies bluntly: "I don't. The architecture is great, but I don't think it's functional. I haven't seen people using it."
David's opinion may be clouded by the damage two years of construction did to his business, the Herb David Guitar Studio, which celebrates its fiftieth anniversary November 22 (see Events). Sales "went down big time, 50 percent," he says, "and it remains to be seen if it'll come back up." Business has improved since the structure opened, David says, "but it's nothing like it was before."
Other neighbors are happier. "The comments I've heard have been positive so far," says Josie Parker, director of the Ann Arbor downtown library just across from the four-level underground structure. "I have parked in it and found it easy to navigate, and I like the open design and the natural light."
"The lighting is fluorescent with white-painted ceilings, so it's very bright," explains Roger Hewitt, treasurer of the Downtown Development Authority. Architect Carl Luckenbach "turned a mundane piece of construction into something exciting. We've heard nothing but very positive comments."
The numbers back him up. In its first full month in August, the structure earned $43,234, nearly 10 percent of the DDA's first-year goal of $451,479, in the slowest month of the year. In large part, Hewitt says, that's because "the demand for monthly parking permits far exceeded expectations. Well over half the [738] spaces are requested for monthly parking. Over one hundred monthly parkers moved from the Liberty Square structure because of the special opening rate of $95 per month for the first two years"--$60 a month less than at Liberty Square. Thanks to the exodus, the DDA is opening part of Liberty Square to hourly parkers.
"The way things have been going, [Library Lane] will be as full as the other structures in a year," Hewitt predicts. "During the school year, most structures are 80 percent full or more."
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