John Lewis in Cardiff have got it right as have the St David's Car Park.Remember the time they launched budget airlines ... and suddenly the leg room vanished? Well, the same on parking - more cars they can fit into a given space, the more money they will make. The don't give a hoot to the size of the car.
Sainsburys in a fantastic example in irrational behaviour here. They have made the parking slots smaller, and then put double white lines between the parking slots to make it seem that there is space for you to open your door (in about 12 inches of space to the next parked car).
Sometimes I wonder if the parking people are in cahoots with the local body shop, to get rid of the dings on the vehicles.
Gosh! of course yes. How else will the small children get to the school that is just around the corner unless you have a pink coloured Range Rover V8 - of course, not to forget, tuned by Overfinch!Would be nice if the “norm” for cars hadn’t got so bloated. Is there really a demand for massive SUVs and Hummer size pick up trucks?
I believe the reason cars have grown in size (even a VW Polo is massive compared to the one we had 30 years ago) is due to the safety features and crash testing needed. Cars have bigger side and rear crumple zones and protection.Would be nice if the “norm” for cars hadn’t got so bloated. Is there really a demand for massive SUVs and Hummer size pick up trucks?
Demand? Yes. Need? No.Would be nice if the “norm” for cars hadn’t got so bloated. Is there really a demand for massive SUVs and Hummer size pick up trucks?
Would be nice if the “norm” for cars hadn’t got so bloated. Is there really a demand for massive SUVs and Hummer size pick up trucks?
I take my Mum & use the parent & child spaces.Take the grand kids and use family bays.
You calling me a fatty.Cars are bigger as most people are wider and taller nowadays
You need to park with the sliding door alongside the other cars passenger door, otherwise the other driver might try to get in damaging your vehicle rather than using his passenger door and sliding across, which is not easy on many cars. They are then more likely to pull forward to let a passenger in.Pretty much all modern cars are way bigger than when parking bay dimensions were devised. It's not just the SUVs. In the sixties most cars in British roads were no more than about 1.5m wide.
However... even with 2m wide cars if people park accurately in a 2.4m bay that leaves a 40cm door gap which should be sufficient. All modern cars have power steering and most have reversing aids such as cameras so it shouldn't be too much to ask for people to position reasonably precisely. But maybe the 'double lined' bays now started to appear do make some sense if they encourage people to park centrally.
Anyway with a Cali it's never really a problem, in a tight space you just use the sliding door to jump out, no?
Evil genius.My tactics for Cali parking
1) If no enforcement for bay straddling do it 2 good, 4 better. Tough out the horrified looks from fellow users
2) If bay straddling prohibited by attendant enforcement (anyone identified a bay enforcement camera yet?) protect the passenger side by parking on a row end or against a structure.
Parking “dings” are far cheaper to repair on drivers side panels
3) Avoid parking next to cars with child seats in. Wider opening and no hands to hold/restrain door when child extracted/inserted.increases risk of damage to Cali
4) As Welsh Gas’ advice and as close as possible. Less space for them to get a good “swing” of their door at your Cali paint work.
5)Don’t park parallel to the bay sides but get the van aligned diagonally.
This causes adjacent parkers to lose their alignment by reference to your van side for parallel parking and you get a bit more space at you passenger or drivers door (whichever you require)
5) Park as far away from entrance to building/venue as possible (if willing to walk extra distance). Most people don’t so your vehicle is left in isolation.
Only downside are the “companion” Parker’s who spy your lonely vehicle and think it needs company,, so cosy up to it.
Happy (dent free )parking
Adding:My tactics for Cali parking
1) If no enforcement for bay straddling do it 2 good, 4 better. Tough out the horrified looks from fellow users
2) If bay straddling prohibited by attendant enforcement (anyone identified a bay enforcement camera yet?) protect the passenger side by parking on a row end or against a structure.
Parking “dings” are far cheaper to repair on drivers side panels
3) Avoid parking next to cars with child seats in. Wider opening and no hands to hold/restrain door when child extracted/inserted.increases risk of damage to Cali
4) As Welsh Gas’ advice and as close as possible. Less space for them to get a good “swing” of their door at your Cali paint work.
5)Don’t park parallel to the bay sides but get the van aligned diagonally.
This causes adjacent parkers to lose their alignment by reference to your van side for parallel parking and you get a bit more space at you passenger or drivers door (whichever you require)
5) Park as far away from entrance to building/venue as possible (if willing to walk extra distance). Most people don’t so your vehicle is left in isolation.
Only downside are the “companion” Parker’s who spy your lonely vehicle and think it needs company,, so cosy up to it.
Happy (dent free )parking
Provided you pay for 2 bays then officially you haven't done anything wrong.My tactics for Cali parking
1) If no enforcement for bay straddling do it 2 good, 4 better. Tough out the horrified looks from fellow users
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