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This problem is old and of unknown status.

Illegal car parking

Reported in the Car parking category anonymously at 11:26, Mon 15 June 2009
Sent to Birmingham City Council 4 minutes later

Despite the double yellow lines, cars (in particular taxis) persistantly stop and wait on Woodbridge Road, in particular opposite Sabai Sabai and Drinksville (they tend to park on the other side of the road). The drivers tend to remain in the car, but it still causes congestion and inconvenience to locals. It could be prevented by installing railings at the edge of the pavement similar to those further down and further up the road.

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Updates

Posted by Nicola at 16:07, Tue 16 June 2009

Installing railings is not the solution. keep Moseley streets naked!

Posted anonymously at 17:09, Tue 16 June 2009

I think railings would help - at the moment cars park on the pavement and stop prams and wheelchairs getting through. Or if not railings, planting trees or even putting some tubs of plants at the edge of the pavement would help.

Posted by Nicola at 11:49, Wed 17 June 2009

Trees or plants would be fine but ugly metal railings force pedestrians to walk further to cross the road and encourages cars to drive faster. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shared_space Shared Space will hopefully be coming to Moseley in the future

Posted anonymously at 14:35, Wed 17 June 2009

Having just reviewed the "shared spaces" website link Nicola provides, I fail to see how it will address the problem of illegal parking. Does anyone know if it has any impact on this? Removing kerbs (if this is one of the measures that would be put in place)actually seems like a way to increase parking problems, not reduce them. I'm also concerned that removing boundaries such as kerbs and rails is likely to have a negative impact on blind pedestrians - I know that blind and partially sighted people do use this road regularly.

Posted by Ian at 21:02, Fri 19 June 2009

The railings would only transfer the inconvenience of motorists, to pedestrians. There is an unfortunate culture in the UK that vehicle drivers have, wrongly believing that they have a right to drive, and thus park...

The shared space schemes I've seen only allow parking in specially designated bays. A vehicle is a large obstruction to those wishing to walk, and railings are an even bigger hindrance to pedestrians - thus many jump over them, risking falling into the path of a vehicle...

The stick (parking tickets) should come after the carrot, making people realise that the street is better when nobody, including themselves, parks...

Ideally these drivers will make more use of walking and cycling to access their destinations in the future - with slower urban traffic speeds making it safer to do this. Cycling is already often the quickest way to access a destination, but people still use their cars, due to the speed of themselves and others when they drive...

Posted by Nicola at 19:09, Mon 22 June 2009

Blind and partially sighted peoples needs are taken into consideration when these schemes are developed. The number of cars in Birmingham has become ridiculous and unsustainable. Some drivers are very selfish and think they have the right to drive and park wherever they like and stuff everybody else . This has to change.

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