Tel Aviv street parking to shrink by 10,000 spaces

Parking in Tel Aviv  / Photo: Shlomi Yosef
Parking in Tel Aviv / Photo: Shlomi Yosef

The latest reduction comes after the local planning and building committee also relaxed requirements for each new home to have its own parking space.

Tel Aviv - Yafo Mayor Ron Huldai famously said several years ago that there is no parking problem in Tel Aviv because there is no parking. Now it seems that the few places that there are will be reduced. The city had 80,000 street parking spaces in 2019, which will be cut by 10,000 in the coming few years because of the construction of infrastructure for public transport projects, it was revealed in a webinar on parking in the city organized by the Gazit-Globe Real estate Research Center at the Interdisciplinary Center (IDC), Herzliya.

Tel Aviv Deputy Mayor for transportation Meital Lahavi told the webinar, "Parking is a resource in short supply and demand exceeds supply, especially due new building and population density. Parking regulations for housing is a component of the ways of working that we are examining in order to cope, for example, with reduced parking on the streets. Another option on the agenda is restricting the number of (street parking) residential permits per household, setting differential tariffs for parking in different areas of demand, making street parking more expensive etc."

The reduction in street parking comes closely on the heels of the decision several months ago by the Tel Aviv Local Planning and Building Committee to permit housing construction in central Tel Aviv, which allows developers to build just half a parking space for each housing unit, down from one parking space per housing unit. In the north and south of the city, the requirement was reduced to 0.8 parking spaces per housing unit.

At the webinar Lahavi stressed, "The need for parking won't disappear, and therefore our role is to find and provide creative solutions such as calculating an average district regulation rather than for each building."

Lahavi explained the available parking in Tel Aviv was being reduced both because of a change in the municipality's policy and other changes like work on the light rail. Arlozorov Street for example has become a building site for the light rail with all its parking places disappearing.

But even though the city has undergone transport changes in the past few years with bicycle paths built, the proliferation of electric bikes and scooters, more lanes allocated for public transport and the expansion of the Autotel shared car project, the car is still king in the city and dominates much of travel around Tel Aviv.

Tel Aviv Municipality Strategic Planning Department head Hagit Naaly-Yosef said, "56% of journeys in the city are undertaken in cars. We hope to increase the proportion of bicycle and public transport users and of course pedestrians. Our urban targets require us to make changes on the issue of parking."

She added, "In the reality in which we find ourselves 67% of employees and students in the city use their own cars." She adds that 43% of residents have parking at home and 48% have parking at work. "There is a clear correlation between a parking place at home and a parking place at work," she says, encouraging people to use their own cars.

The Tel Aviv Municipality is hoping that the light rail will change this picture of congestion and jams and the way people travel in the city. Naaly-Yosef said, "Along the route of the Red Line and other lines that are being built, the maximum allocation of parking per housing unit will be 0.6."

Of the 340,000 parking spaces in the city, Naaly-Yosef says that 24% (80,000) are on the street, 130,000 are in private apartments and housing, 110,000 in places of employment and car parks and 20,000 belonging to the Ahuzat Hof parking company. 67% of street parking is reserved for residents at night.

Tel Aviv municipal engineer Udi Carmeli insists that in big cities the car is a thing of the past. "We are adding huge numbers of parking spaces to the city and we will continue to add them. Today it is rare to find a new apartment without a parking space. But does every tenant need a parking space. The answer is clearly no.

He explains that today when he leaves his apartment the number of transport alternatives has risen dramatically in recent years. "There are six or seven different options. Autotel, bicycles, scooters for rent, taxis and more. For managing an inter-city life the car is yesterday's thing.

But many residents and building developers object to this approach. Saliah Rothschild building company CEO Tomer Saliah said, "There is a feeling that the municipality thinks it has found a short cut. Instead of investing to make a long road, we'll shorten the road and reduce parking requirements and in that way they'll be less cars."

But Saliah insists that there are not enough alternatives to the car in the city and the fact is that people are prepared to pay an extra NIS 350,000 for a home that has its own parking.

Published by Globes, Israel business news - en.globes.co.il - on January 4, 2021

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2021

Parking in Tel Aviv  / Photo: Shlomi Yosef
Parking in Tel Aviv / Photo: Shlomi Yosef
Unframe founders credit: Yossi Yarom Israeli AI enterprise platform co Unframe raises $50m

Unframe’s turnkey AI solutions enable companies to solve any enterprise AI use case at scale with fully functional, customized AI solutions for businesses in a matter of hours, rather than months.

Combatica credit: Combatica Combatica launches next-gen VR AI training platform

The Israeli company's virtual reality platform includes 50 AI generated scenarios, seven maps and even situations for operating night vision.

Shekel credit: Shutterstock Vladirina 32 Shekel volatility after US tariffs announcement

The shekel is weakening sharply against the euro, which is gaining following the unveiling of Donald Trump's tariffs plan.

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich credit: Noam Moskovitz Knesset Spokesperson Treasury assesses potential damage to Israel's US exports

Israel will be charged a higher tariff on its exports to the US - its biggest export customer - than Turkey and the UAE.

Iranian flag credit: Shutterstock Why inflation haunts Iran

With a month-on-month increase of 3.3% and an annual rate of 37.1%, inflation reflects the struggles of millions of Iranians.

APM merges with lawyers from Doron, Tikotzky Kantor, Gutman credit: Eyal Merilos APM merges with 12 lawyers from Doron, Tikotzky Kantor, Gutman

With the addition of these 12 lawyers, Amit Pollak Matalon & Co. will now have 135 lawyers.

US President Donald Trump credit: Reuters Sipa USA Israel on list as Trump unveils tariffs

Relatively low reciprocal tariffs will be imposed on Israeli goods sold in the US.

Deflated unicorn credit: Shutterstock Big Tech 50 reports more huge falls in startup valuations

Israeli R&D partnership Big Tech 50 reports that an investment of $2 million in Orcam made in 2021, shrank to just $31,000 at the end of 2024.

NextFerm technologies based on yeast credit: NextFerm Food-tech co NextFerm suspends operations

The company, which produces food ingredients in yeast without genetic engineering, cannot pay its debts and is seeking a buyer.

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich credit: Shlomi Yosef OECD sees recovery in growth but high inflation

The OECD Israel Economic Survey 2025 recommends that the Israeli government take several restraining measures, in order to exit the economic storm created by the war.

Dano Ben-Hur credit: Dror Sithakol Statisticians contradict BoI on impact of housing finance deals

The Central Bureau of Statistics insists the impact of 20/80 buy now pay later financing deals on the real estate market and housing prices is minimal.

Governor of the Bank of Israel Amir Yaron  credit: Government Press Office Debt fears top Bank of Israel's concerns

Most unusually, Governor of the Bank of Israel Amir Yaron's press conference last week did not focus on inflation and the impending interest rate decision.

US President Donald Trump  credit: Reuters/Leah Millis Israel moves to avoid Trump's tariffs axe

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich has signed an order canceling all tariffs on imports from the US. The impact will mostly be on agricultural produce.

Forbes Rich List credit: Shutterstock Maslowski Marcin Wiz founders ranked in Forbes 2025 Rich List

There are a few dozen Israelis listed in the 2025 Forbes Real-Time Billionaires List including Wiz founders Assaf Rappaport, Yinon Costica, Roy Reznik and Ami Luttwak.

SatixFy CEO Nir Barkan credit: Ariel Barkan Canada's MDA Space to buy Israeli satcom co SatixFy

MDA Space will pay $269 million for the Israeli company, including taking on a $76 million debt and a 75% premium on SatixFy's closing price on Nasdaq yesterday.

Raising dollars credit: Shutterstock Israeli startups raised over $1b in March

Israeli privately-held tech companies have raised $2.1 billion in the first three months of 2025, according to IVC-LeumiTech, up 24% from the corresponding quarter of 2024.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018