willcove wrote:
I couldn't believe the palaver I went through in one multi-storey the other day. The parking spaces are grouped in sets of three between the pillars that support the floor above. Now, when parking nose first, the left-hand pillar forced me over to the right-hand edge of the parking space, which meant that I couldn't get out of my car if anyone was parked in the middle space. So, having parked and then found that out, I drove out of the space and reversed in, so that I could get out of the car into the space behind the pillar. Now, I could get out of the car, but then I couldn't squeeze between my car (or the one next door) and that wretched pillar. On the other side of the set of three spaces, the pillar stopped me opening my door when I parked nose-first, and forced me over against the car in the middle space so that I still couldn't open my door after I reversed in.
What a nightmare -- I ended up driving up three floors and past tens of empty parking spaces before finding somewhere with a vacant "middle" space. The multi-storey existed in the early seventies, so it was probably adequate in its day.
Wouldn't happen to have been in Wakefield would it?
The old Alms House Lane car park is very much like this, and it does annoy a lot of people. However if you move just a little closer to the wall in front, the doors open a dream.
However I agree with what is being said here. The spaces are definitely getting smaller. My manager at work has resorted to parking his Merc diagonally across two spaces, to prevent having his doors and wings smashed by inconsiderate or overweight motorists trying to squeeze in and out of their cars.