Henry Grabar is a staff writer at Slate who writes about housing, transportation, and urban policy. He has contributed to The Atlantic, The Guardian, and The Wall Street Journal, and was the editor of the book The Future of Transportation. He received the Richard Rogers Fellowship from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design and was a finalist for the Livingston Award for excellence in national reporting by journalists under thirty-five.
“Consistently entertaining and often downright
funny.” —The New Yorker
“You might expect a book about parking to be a snore. But I have
news to report. Henry Grabar’s Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains
the World is not a slog; it’s a romp, packed with tales of
anger, violence, theft, lust, greed, political chicanery and
transportation policy gone wrong . . . [Grabar] lays out
the issue cleanly and clearly . . . His highly entertaining
take on a serious subject will persuade more people to at least
take a good look.” —The Los Angeles Times
“[A] wry and revelatory new book about parking (a combination of
words I never thought I would write) . . . The dream of the open
road assumes a place to put our cars when we arrive at our
destination. This is perhaps why so many Americans expect parking
to be 'convenient, available and free'—in other words, 'perfect.'
Grabar empathizes with these desires, which is partly what makes
Paved Paradise so persuasive.” —Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times
Book Review
“Immensely informative and fascinating account.” —Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
“Henry Grabar’s Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World
covers a topic most people overlook . . . The author himself makes
the bold claim that 'parking is the primary determinant of the way
the place you live looks, feels, and functions.' By the end of this
compelling and insistent book, you might actually believe
it.” —The Wall Street Journal
“The parking gods have smiled on Henry Grabar, who has managed to
write an engrossing account of the ways in which parking has come
to define—and in many cases ruin—the modern American
city.” —Financial Times
“Henry Grabar analyzes parking in Paved Paradise: How Parking
Explains the World, taking a topic so quotidian that, when explored
with his masterful knowledge of urban history, it becomes almost
metaphysical.” —The New Republic
“Paved Paradise, by Slate columnist Henry Grabar, investigates a
topic that’s somehow simultaneously mundane and radicalizing: our
extremely American, almost existential search for a parking spot .
. . seeing the country through a ‘parking rules everything around
me’ lens is an eye-opening education.” —Curbed
“Grabar presents the overarching story of how the unquenchable
infrastructure required by parking has determined nearly every
aspect of urban planning . . . All library shelves will benefit
from having this definitive account of an everyday drudgery that
deeply affects drivers and nondrivers alike.” —Booklist (starred
review)
“A deep dive into how the complex rules of parking are affecting us
all and what we can do about it . . . [Grabar] proves to be an
adept guide to this knotty topic . . . An engrossing examination of
parking and the many other issues that intersect with it.” —Kirkus
(starred review)
"Using vivid examples and illustrations . . . Grabar builds a
powerful case that making parking a little more scarce will make
Americans’ lives a lot better. This deep dive into an overlooked
aspect of the modern world delivers.” —Publisher's Weekly
"Grabar offers an intriguing, wide-ranging, readable perspective of
the urban American parking scene, its issues, and possible future.”
—Library Journal
“Henry Grabar has written an excellent book on how badly America
has screwed up its parking policies, and in turn ruined many of its
cities . . . everyone interested in urban economics (or
parking) should pick this one up.” —Tyler Cowen, Marginal
Revolution
“No one thinks about parking until they can’t find a spot. But the
implications of finding room for cars at rest is massive, and Henry
Grabar has gifted us with a stunningly eye-opening, wildly engaging
survey of a chronically—and wrongly—overlooked phenomenon.” —Tom
Vanderbilt, author of Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do
“Parking—the key to the American landscape, hiding in plain sight.
But do you want to read a book about it? Yes, if it's Henry
Grabar's lively, entertaining tour of how parking contorts our
cities and suburbs into unlivable (or at least unhappy) spaces, and
how we can remake them.” —Emily Bazelon, author of Charged: The New
Movement to Transform American Prosecution and End Mass
Incarceration
“From curbside battles to sprawling mall lots, penny-pinching
mayors to NIMBY homeowners, Henry Grabar’s Paved Paradise
demonstrates, in rich and at times downright absurdist detail, how
parking has come to dominate and frustrate our lives—and how we
might save our cities.” —Alexandra Lange, author of Meet Me by the
Fountain: An Inside History of the Mall
“Paved Paradise is a total delight, a tour de force of fantastic
reporting. You will never look at parked cars the same way again.”
—Clive Thompson, author of Coders: The Making of a New Tribe and
the Remaking of the World
“When people think of cities and suburbs, they think of housing,
office buildings, retail shops, and malls. But few of us ever
consider parking. Yet as Henry Grabar tells it, parking actually
consumes more space in America than housing. Paved Paradise is must
reading for mayors, urbanists, and everyone who wants to understand
America’s parking obsession and what it costs our cities,
economies, and society. It is a spectacular achievement.” —Richard
Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class
“Like no one else before, Henry Grabar explains why mismanaged
parking is the greatest single cause of many urban ills. Everyone
who wants to reduce traffic congestion, clean the air, support
public transportation, encourage biking and walking, promote
business, increase employment, improve public services, and slow
global warming should read Paved Paradise and heed Grabar’s advice
for solving the parking problem.” —Donald Shoup, author of The High
Cost of Free Parking
“Every American with a driver’s license needs to read Henry
Grabar’s brilliant book on parking. He’s interviewed a wonderful
cast of characters. His analysis of asphalt disaster is laced with
humor to help us process bad news: although parking requirements
keep housing costs high and limit new businesses, drivers still
can’t find a space. Grabar demonstrates why the lively, mixed-use,
pedestrian neighborhoods we would all like to live in, or at least
drive to, are in very limited supply.” —Dolores Hayden, author of
Building Suburbia: Green Fields and Urban Growth
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