h a l f b a k e r yKeep out of reach of children.
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And how do the passengers get out? |
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Anything that actively discourages putting more than one person in a car is probably a bad idea, if you're trying to make more parking spaces available. |
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I'm torn on that idea, Peter. I think it's better for individuals, especially women, to park as close as possible to the store or whatever, to minimize the chances of being accosted in the parking lot. |
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I've seen women's parking areas in Europe, for just that purpose. |
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have magnetic cars,drive up the walls of the supermarket
and leave them stuck to it while you shop |
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hmm... aren't most of those concrete structures initially established on a steel frame? Also, would there be ladders for ingress/egress? Would one park front-up (hard to keep any doors open), front down (hard to keep them closed), or horizontally (near impossible to get/stay inside). Maybe we should go to overhead-hinged doors (a la Delorean). Would a car start if it were vertical? Don't the fuel systems depend on gravity at least initially? Anyway, I like the initial idea. Again, my car is very small and old, so I park as close to that jackass in the F-350 as possible while still staying inside the 1/2 space that he so generously left me. |
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technobadger... this might cause some problems while driving... if your magnetic car passes by another magnetic car either A) Your cars will be drawn together causing a collision or B) Your cars will be pushed apart causing you to go off the road. Maybe the stores should be magnetic, but then what do you do about the poor sap with a plate in his head... he's going to be stuck to the wall for a while. |
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do you have concrete supermarkets? |
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Start designing cars that are only wide enough for a single
occupant, but make them double-decker, so the
passenger is seated above the driver. |
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And I thought we had enough problems with SUV roll-overs... |
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well then, Wes, have extendible wheels,as in traning wheels for a kid's bike, on this new tall car,then move them in when thecar is to park. |
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I had exactly the same idea. Because I couldn't get online earlier, I even typed it out in a Word document: |
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I work in a hospital. Like just about every other hospital in the country, parking is in woefully short supply, and if you arrive a few minutes late you can spend an hour trawling the car parks looking for a space. There is no space (or money) available to build more car parks, so I propose the following simple solution: park the cars closer together! |
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Obviously without a little thought this would just trap everyone in their car. |
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However, Ive noticed that many of the staff here travel alone so if cars were parked alternate front in/front out you could position them so that the passenger sides were adjacent. You could then park the cars so close that the passenger door cant be opened and just leave enough space for the drivers to get out.* |
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I havent carried out any research into this but over the many hundred parking spaces here Im sure we could create room for an additional thirty or forty cars, which would certainly ease things slightly, and make one less thing for our harassed healthcare workers to worry about in the morning. |
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* - for those people who DONT travel alone, simply let your passenger(s) out before you park. |
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So you've beaten me to it - but I've given you a bun anyway. |
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