More Than Parking: 12 Projects to Reclaim Urban Space

Subscriber Access

Marginalized in architectural discourse and often dismissed as purely functional, parking garages remain among the most ubiquitous structures in the urban landscape. Designed to accommodate the needs of private vehicles, they occupy central locations, shape skylines, and consume considerable resources, yet rarely receive the same attention — or architectural care — as cultural institutions, schools, or housing. Despite their prevalence, these buildings tend to fade into the background of daily life, treated as infrastructural necessities rather than as design opportunities.

This is beginning to change. As urban mobility undergoes profound transformations — from the decline of car ownership to the rise of electric vehicles and shared transport systems — the role of parking infrastructure is being redefined. Architects and planners are reimagining garages as adaptable frameworks that integrate public space, ecological functions, and mixed-use programs. These new approaches challenge the perception of parking as a residual typology and instead position it as a civic structure with the potential to support more inclusive, flexible, and sustainable urban models.

More Than Parking: 12 Projects to Reclaim Urban Space - Image 2 of 31More Than Parking: 12 Projects to Reclaim Urban Space - Image 3 of 31More Than Parking: 12 Projects to Reclaim Urban Space - Image 4 of 31More Than Parking: 12 Projects to Reclaim Urban Space - Image 5 of 31More Than Parking: 12 Projects to Reclaim Urban Space - More Images+ 26

Content Loader

Image gallery

See allShow less
About this author
Cite: Diogo Borges Ferreira. "More Than Parking: 12 Projects to Reclaim Urban Space" 11 Sep 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1033620/more-than-parking-12-projects-to-reclaim-urban-space> ISSN 0719-8884

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.