
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Parking is one of the great paradoxes of American life. On the one hand, we have paved an ungodly amount of land to park our cars. On the other, it seems like it’s never enough.
Slate’s Henry Grabar has spent the last few years investigating how our pathological need for car storage determines the look, feel, and function of the places we live. It turns out our quest for parking has made some of our biggest problems worse.
In this episode, we’re going to hunt for parking, from the mean streets of Brooklyn to the sandy lots of Florida. We’ll explore how parking has quietly damaged the American landscape—and see what might fix it.
This episode was written by Henry Grabar, author of Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World. It was edited by Willa Paskin, who produces Decoder Ring with Katie Shepherd. We had extra production from Patrick Fort and editing help from Joel Meyer. Derek John is Slate’s executive producer of narrative podcasts. Merritt Jacob is our senior technical director.
Thank you to: Jane Wilberding, Rachel Weinberger, Donald Shoup, Andrés Duany, Robert Davis, Micah Davis, Christy Milliken, Fletcher Isacks, Victor Benhamou, and Nina Pareja.
If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, you can email us at [email protected]
If you haven’t yet, please subscribe and rate our feed in Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. (Even better, tell your friends.)
If you’re a fan of the show, sign up for Slate Plus. You’ll be able to listen to Decoder Ring without any ads—and your support is crucial to our work. Go to www.slate.com/decoderplus to join Slate Plus today.
Decoder Ring is now available on YouTube. Listen here: https://slate.trib.al/ucMyTst
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
4.6
2377023,770 ratings
Parking is one of the great paradoxes of American life. On the one hand, we have paved an ungodly amount of land to park our cars. On the other, it seems like it’s never enough.
Slate’s Henry Grabar has spent the last few years investigating how our pathological need for car storage determines the look, feel, and function of the places we live. It turns out our quest for parking has made some of our biggest problems worse.
In this episode, we’re going to hunt for parking, from the mean streets of Brooklyn to the sandy lots of Florida. We’ll explore how parking has quietly damaged the American landscape—and see what might fix it.
This episode was written by Henry Grabar, author of Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World. It was edited by Willa Paskin, who produces Decoder Ring with Katie Shepherd. We had extra production from Patrick Fort and editing help from Joel Meyer. Derek John is Slate’s executive producer of narrative podcasts. Merritt Jacob is our senior technical director.
Thank you to: Jane Wilberding, Rachel Weinberger, Donald Shoup, Andrés Duany, Robert Davis, Micah Davis, Christy Milliken, Fletcher Isacks, Victor Benhamou, and Nina Pareja.
If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, you can email us at [email protected]
If you haven’t yet, please subscribe and rate our feed in Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. (Even better, tell your friends.)
If you’re a fan of the show, sign up for Slate Plus. You’ll be able to listen to Decoder Ring without any ads—and your support is crucial to our work. Go to www.slate.com/decoderplus to join Slate Plus today.
Decoder Ring is now available on YouTube. Listen here: https://slate.trib.al/ucMyTst
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
90,621 Listeners
38,175 Listeners
1,875 Listeners
991 Listeners
2,855 Listeners
1,017 Listeners
7,713 Listeners
1,016 Listeners
8,240 Listeners
1,379 Listeners
11,899 Listeners
5,658 Listeners
59,401 Listeners
86,152 Listeners
110,916 Listeners
53 Listeners
2,040 Listeners
239 Listeners
2,090 Listeners
18,832 Listeners
2,396 Listeners
1,287 Listeners
15,964 Listeners
1,187 Listeners
414 Listeners
4,713 Listeners
425 Listeners
59 Listeners
46 Listeners
95 Listeners
411 Listeners
4 Listeners
83 Listeners