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June 2016

No parking on double yellow lines - photo of the month
July 11, 2016 Read time: 1 min

No parking on double yellow lines - Image courtesy of World Highways reader Bogdan Schiteanu

Related Content

  • No parking here
    August 15, 2013
    In the UK, double yellow lines painted close at the kerbside denote an area where parking is not allowed. But in the city of Cambridge the authorities have decided to paint double yellow lines just 307mm long in between two parking bays. The space is barely large enough to park a radio-controlled car or to slot in a bicycle, let alone a motor vehicle, but the city’s authorities have nevertheless decided that it is important to denote the area is not to be used. Quite why it was felt necessary to take the ti
  • Leeding the lines
    July 17, 2012
    In the UK city of Leeds, road workers painted double yellow lines indicating that the section of road was a no parking zone around a parked vehicle. The owner of the vehicle returned to find the lines painted around his car and assumed at first that this was a practical joke. The local highway authority is now informing contractors to use some common sense in future.
  • Parking problems in Bristol
    August 21, 2015
    It seems that people will park in the smallest of places, despite the efforts of urban street designers and town planners to ensure an orderly arrangement of suitably spaced cars. The advent of smaller-than-small cars has meant that drivers will park in smaller-and-smaller spaces. Surely some spaces are just too small to attract drivers of even the smallest car. But the city of Bristol, in southwest England, has taken no chances and has painted the double-yellow ‘no parking’ lines in areas where no one in t
  • September 2016
    November 14, 2016
    Wide clearance is required for some vehicles - image courtesy of Petra Schwimmbeck