Skip to main content

Parking bays too small for comfort

A UK local authority council has been criticised for what one resident has said is knowingly creating undersized parking bays. The parking area -- smaller than recommended -- makes it harder for motorists to make sure all their vehicle is within the legally allotted area. The council has been fining motorists for not having their cars completely parked within the parking bay, and that’s not fair, said the resident of Newbury town, just outside London. He reportedly went around measuring the parking bay, acc
February 18, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A UK local authority council has been criticised for what one resident has said is knowingly creating undersized parking bays.

The parking area -- smaller than recommended -- makes it harder for motorists to make sure all their vehicle is within the legally allotted area.

The council has been fining motorists for not having their cars completely parked within the parking bay, and that’s not fair, said the resident of Newbury town, just outside London.

He reportedly went around measuring the parking bay, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal according to newspaper reports The telegraph: Drivers fined for being outside too-small car parking bays in Newbury false http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/road-and-rail-transport/11417281/Drivers-fined-for-being-outside-too-small-car-parking-bays-in-Newbury.html false false%>.

Government recommendation is that parking bays should be a minimum of 2.4m by 4.8m, but the resident claims he has measured bays that are up to a metre shorter.

The resident said some of the bays are too small for even a Mini model of car.

West Berkshire Council admitted that last year that it had fined 142 motorists around US$77 each for "not parking wholly within the bay".

The council said it will not display warning signs about the smaller bays, but continue to rely on the "discretion and common sense" of its traffic wardens about whether to issue parking fines.

The council said its employees did not deliberately build smaller bays in order to catch people out. "Probably not enough attention was paid to building them to the standard size. However, it does mean that we can provide more car parking for more people coming to the town,” he said.

Related Content

  • VIDEO captures unloved, unowned Reynolds Bridge reduced to rubble
    May 18, 2015
    There was a big bang in a small town in the US state of Pennsylvania this month when a fragmentation explosion brought down the 100-year-old Reynolds Road Bridge. It was the end to the unloved bridge near Factoryville, population around 1,500. Factoryville is notable for a lack of factories ever since the one and only plant, a wool-into-cloth factory, closed down several years after it opened in the 1800s. Local residents were not sorry to see the felling of the 40m long, reinforced concrete arch deck
  • Pothole pique drives UK man into action
    December 12, 2014
    Potholes are the scourge of commuters and the source of hours of complaining around the office water cooler. But some people do more than complain; they take action that gets results, such as happened recently in the United Kingdom.
  • VIDEO: Even the police can make driving errors
    September 16, 2015
    The very people who urge drivers to use more caution are not immune to driving errors themselves, as the video here shows. Speed is sometimes involved and so is simply lack of due care. A speeding police car with its lights flashing and horns blaring may have the right of way, in law or by courtesy, but in many cases the police driver should take note of dangerous situations. At times police drivers also can make a simply mistake, as recently happened in the Spanish Mediterranean city of Barcelona. A
  • Seoul street sitters disrupt traffic all because of a dare
    March 18, 2015
    Traffic on an eight-lane road through one of Seoul’s wealthiest districts was disrupted for half an hour by two men sitting in chairs in the middle of the road. It wasn’t a political protest but reportedly a dare agreed by the men, in their 20s, to see who could last the longest sitting in the road, the fashionable Gangnam Avenue. The two men were sitting in the road for half an hour before police arrived to arrest them, Korean media reported. A witness apparently said they didn’t appear afraid of getting h