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Saturday parking hours
Does anyone know why we have Saturday morning restrictions in many areas,
even in quiet back streets, til 1.30? M. |
Saturday parking hours
On Sat, 12 Mar 2005 10:18:41 GMT, marcb
wrote: Does anyone know why we have Saturday morning restrictions in many areas, even in quiet back streets, til 1.30? So shoppers will use the provided car parks and pay for their use? Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
Saturday parking hours
"Neil Williams" wrote in message
... On Sat, 12 Mar 2005 10:18:41 GMT, marcb wrote: Does anyone know why we have Saturday morning restrictions in many areas, even in quiet back streets, til 1.30? So shoppers will use the provided car parks and pay for their use? Neil Or so that residents can find a parking space within half a mile of their own doorstep ? |
Saturday parking hours
On Sat, 12 Mar 2005 11:03:02 -0000, "umpston"
wrote: Or so that residents can find a parking space within half a mile of their own doorstep ? That, too, though one should remember when buying a property with no off-street parking that, unless a residents' parking scheme is in force, one is no more or less entitled to park outside it than any other person operating a motor vehicle. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
Saturday parking hours
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Saturday parking hours
Eh?
Most town centres (and most suburban centres of London) have on-street parking restrictions covering the whole of Saturday afternoon (typically 8am-6.30pm Monday to Saturday). Central London is highly unusual in allowing free parking on Saturday afternoon on streets where it is banned on weekdays. |
Saturday parking hours
"Richard Adamfi" wrote in message
oups.com... Eh? Most town centres (and most suburban centres of London) have on-street parking restrictions covering the whole of Saturday afternoon (typically 8am-6.30pm Monday to Saturday). Central London is highly unusual in allowing free parking on Saturday afternoon on streets where it is banned on weekdays. I remember when people used to be encouraged to shop in town centres, parking was simple, free - or very cheap, and charged after the event (avoiding the PRP parking vultures). Its no wonder that our towns and villages are becoming a local shop, maybe a pub, and 16 estate agents. Destroying the town in the anti-private-transport quest. -- Everything above is the personal opinion of the author, and nothing to do with where he works and all that lovely disclaimery stuff. Posted in his lunch hour too. |
Saturday parking hours
Paul Weaver wrote:
"Richard Adamfi" wrote in message oups.com... Eh? Most town centres (and most suburban centres of London) have on-street parking restrictions covering the whole of Saturday afternoon (typically 8am-6.30pm Monday to Saturday). Central London is highly unusual in allowing free parking on Saturday afternoon on streets where it is banned on weekdays. I remember when people used to be encouraged to shop in town centres, parking was simple, free - or very cheap, and charged after the event (avoiding the PRP parking vultures). Its no wonder that our towns and villages are becoming a local shop, maybe a pub, and 16 estate agents. Destroying the town in the anti-private-transport quest. Yes, that must be it... not trying to save our town centres from becoming car-jammed polluted nightmares. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
Saturday parking hours
"Dave Arquati" wrote in message
... I remember when people used to be encouraged to shop in town centres, parking was simple, free - or very cheap, and charged after the event (avoiding the PRP parking vultures). Its no wonder that our towns and villages are becoming a local shop, maybe a pub, and 16 estate agents. Destroying the town in the anti-private-transport quest. Yes, that must be it... not trying to save our town centres from becoming car-jammed polluted nightmares. Save it for who? Theres no reason to go into most town centres now. If you really want to stop the polution, noise and smells, you'd have pedestrianised streets in the middle with NO BUSSES, and you'd have cheap (or free - theres a thought!) carparks nearby. Effectivly it would become an out-of-town shopping center, in the middle of town. On a similar point, why do station carparks charge you money? When I lived near Warrington the local station had a small (free) car park, as well as plenty of space 50 yards away in the shopping center car park. 20 minutes from Birchwood and you're in the center of Manchester. If you want to encourage people to use trains, why charge them to park at the stations? Why not make park and rid schemes (for commuting. carrying a bookshelf or a weeks shopping back on the train just isn't a nice thing to do) cheap, safe, reliable and easy. -- Everything above is the personal opinion of the author, and nothing to do with where he works and all that lovely disclaimery stuff. Posted in his lunch hour too. |
Saturday parking hours
Paul Weaver wrote:
Save it for who? Theres no reason to go into most town centres now. Sadly, this is the case. However, I'm always a believer in supporting your local traders - both market and shops - even if it means paying an extra penny or two on a bag of spuds. It was actually *more* hassle getting the car out and driving to a supermarket than it was walking to the local market - having lived in Streatham (using Brixton market), Fulham and Hammersmith this was the case every single time. For many of us in the sticks public transport is a pain in the bum tho (I'm now in Wakefield). -- Joel Rowbottom - joel at fotopic dot net - Head Guy, Fotopic.Net 10M+ photos :: 200+ countries :: Free gallery at http://fotopic.net Stuck for gifts? Mugs, t-shirts, jewellery: http://shop.fotopic.net Fotopic V6 launched - loads of new features, easier to use, try it! |
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