City pitches new parking garage and extended free parking to aid downtown London, Ont.’s recovery
“There really is no such thing as free parking— real life is not a monopoly game,” asserted Climate Action London’s Mary Ann Hodge.
Hodge opposed a recommendation by city staff to extend a free parking promotional offer into next year.
She explained that Londoners are picking up the financial tab for the program, and bear the environmental costs, “We really need to be reducing our use of fossil fuels and encouraging other modes of transportation.”
A new report to the Civic Works Committee recommends several parking initiatives in the core area:
- Extend CORE code for free parking to Q1 of 2024
- Restart 185 Queens Ave parking garage and building process
- Allow bulk discounted reserve parking in municipal lots
- Undertake new Downtown Parking Strategy
Since early in the COVID-19 pandemic, the Honk Mobile Parking App has offered two hours of free municipal parking in London’s core area business districts by using the promo code CORE.
The staff report stated, “This timeframe will provide additional time for economic recovery to the spring of 2024 and allow much of the major construction to be completed in the Core Area.”
Real estate professional George Georgopolous from RE/MAX International believes the promotion is important to the economic recovery of core businesses.
“It’s a great incentive,” said Georgopolous. “I think the two hours allows people to get in and do what they want. Without that they’re gonna go to the suburbs.”
Councillor Skylar Franke rejected the extension of the free parking promotion.
“I actually tried to put a motion together last week to stop that [promo code] because I don’t think we should be subsidizing parking when we’re in a climate emergency,” Franke explained.
According to the report, the CORE code for free parking was used 200,000 times in 2022, a total discount cost of about $1 million.
Specifically, $50,000 (25 cents per transaction) was paid by the city to Honk Mobile and the remaining costs are an estimate related to parking revenue that wasn’t realized.
Hodge isn’t convinced that the popularity of the promo code translated into additional visitations to core business districts, “It isn’t clear how many of those 200,000 uses were actually people who wouldn’t have come downtown in the first place.”
In their report, city staff also recommended restarting the search for a developer to build a public parking garage and residential building (with affordable units) on a municipal lot at 185 Queens Ave. just west of Clarence.
Municipal parking lot at 185 Queens Ave. where a public parking garage may be constructed in London, Ont., as seen on June 7, 2023. (Daryl Newcombe/CTV News London)
The initial RFP process was halted in 2020 as civic administration focussed on pandemic initiatives.
The amount of additional parking created near the centre of downtown would depend on the proposals received from developers.
“We absolutely need more parking downtown,” said Georgopolous. “Ever since the Covent Garden Market building transformed, [that was] 1,100 spaces that were gone.
Franke wants to learn more about the parking garage proposal, but thinks it isn’t the municipality’s responsibility to supply parking for private businesses and property owners.
“If you own a piece of property downtown and you want parking, people will either have to pay for it, or you’ll have to buy a parking lot and offer that to your clients,” she said.
The report on potential Core Area Parking Initiatives will be considered by the Civic Works Committee on June 13.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Premier Wab Kinew: From rapper to reporter to Manitoba's top political office
Rap artist. Journalist. Economics student. Premier. Wab Kinew's path as a young man, including several brushes with the law and some convictions, did not appear a likely path to becoming the first First Nations premier of a province.
Here's how much it costs to raise children in Canada, according to new statistics
A new report from Statistics Canada estimates how much parents will spend on children over the course of their lifetime.
Cloud of $20 bills causes disturbance in southeast Calgary
Some say it can't buy happiness while others say it's the root of all evil, but money did cause some excitement in a southeast Calgary neighbourhood Tuesday.
WATCH Dramatic video: Backpackers caught in fireball caused by lithium-ion battery explosion
Two backpackers were caught in a fireball in the hallway of a Sydney hostel after a Lithium-ion battery exploded inside the room.
After judge's rebuke, Trump returns to court for 3rd day for fraud lawsuit trial
Former U.S. president Donald Trump returned to his New York civil fraud trial for a third day Wednesday after running afoul of the judge by denigrating a key court staffer in a social media post.
U.K. police open a corporate manslaughter investigation into a hospital where a nurse killed 7 babies
British police have opened an investigation into corporate manslaughter at a northern England hospital after a neonatal nurse was convicted of murdering seven babies and trying to kill six others when she worked there, authorities said Wednesday.
Sirens blare across Russia as it holds nationwide emergency drills
Sirens wailed across Russia and TV stations interrupted regular programming to broadcast warnings Wednesday as part of sweeping drills intended to test the readiness of the country's emergency responders amid the fighting in Ukraine.
A bus plummeted 15 metres from an elevated road in Venice, killing 21 people
A bus carrying dozens of people plummeted 15 metres from an elevated road in Venice, causing a fiery crash that killed 21 people and injured at least 15, mostly foreign tourists returning to a nearby campsite.
Trio wins Nobel Prize in chemistry for quantum dots, tiny particles that power TVs and phones
Three scientists in the United States won the Nobel Prize in chemistry Wednesday for their work on quantum dots -- particles just a few atoms in diameter that can release very bright coloured light and whose applications in everyday life include electronics and medical imaging.