We all know America has a massive problem with sprawl and mandatory parking minimums, however there does seem to be a trend of easing these arbitrary minimums. With that said, we still have massive parking lots with nothing happening.

What is preventing that land from being leased and turned into solar farms? Or for that matter - active parking lots? Why not build raised structure to put solar farms over top of parking lots - not just here in the us - but everywhere?

Pro being … Energy? Shade for cars? Something to look at other parking lots?

Cons being… Safety? Shady people in shady places? Something to look at other than solar farms?

I know there are articles on this - but just wanted to hear y’all’s thoughts on it since it’s been rattling in my head for a minute.

  • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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    2 months ago

    We have a bunch of that around my area too. The first was actually a high school. I think it was some sort of proof of concept thing. I bunch of colleges have that now so I assume there is some sort of grant.

    There is a college on the coast that is a converted military base with massive amounts of unused/parking space. They added a huge ammonts of solar to power a significant portion of the campus.

    And everything I just said was at least 15 years ago. It works pretty well.

  • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Cost is the only reason. It would be very expensive to build out solar shade for all the parking spaces, even with the money making benefits.

    The reason is that most of these parking lots are in retail spaces. These spaces often use a “triple net” lease that makes the tenant responsible for power costs, not the land owner.

    The land owner doesnt pay any power bills, so they don’t care about long term utility savings, and the tenants cant justify a huge upfront cost that will save them money on power bills, but one they wont own and one they won’t benefit financially from if they leave that particular retail space.

    In order for this to happen consistently, it would need to be a legal requirement. Any law passed to do it would have immense amounts of monied opposition from rich land owners.

    • vividspecter@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      The land owner doesnt pay any power bills, so they don’t care about long term utility savings, and the tenants cant justify a huge upfront cost that will save them money on power bills, but one they wont own and one they won’t benefit financially from if they leave that particular retail space.

      This is the same reason most rental houses don’t have solar panels.

      Although I could see a future where panels are so cheap that people just add them whenever there is a major renovation or new build. It’s already close to that point in Australia.

  • yessikg@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 months ago

    Adding solar panels for parking lots that are needed, like the ones at the aiports, is good. But, we should get rid of as many huge parking lots in the cities as we can