London parking on Sunday.. double yellow or single yellow ??

London parking on Sunday.. double yellow or single yellow ??

Author
Discussion

IceBoy

Original Poster:

2,443 posts

221 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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Hi All, wanted to drive to Oxford St tomorrow and wondered where the closest place to park is on street on a Sunday?

Can I park on double or single yellow lines??

Iceboy

greysquirrel

332 posts

169 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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You mean, for free? Nowhere. It’s not your usual yellow line Sunday free for all.

IceBoy

Original Poster:

2,443 posts

221 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
quotequote all
I thought single yellow are usually Monday to Saturday and free on Sunday?

loafer123

15,430 posts

215 months

Turn7

23,604 posts

221 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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Westminster yellows dont count on Sundays IIRC.... Unsure about other boroughs tho....

Fas1975

1,778 posts

164 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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Park on Great Portland Street. It’s perpendicular to oxford street. And is basically a long yellow line for parking. I parking up in the middle near the BBC building as it’s less busy and always available.

alfaben

166 posts

155 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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Personally I'd completely avoid driving into central London and instead park in Westfield White City which will cost £8 for 24 hours or £6 if you register for the Smart Parking.

Central line is a few minutes walk from the shopping centre at Shepard's Bush.

Edited by alfaben on Saturday 1st September 21:28

David A

3,606 posts

251 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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Underground car parks on park lane are good. Top one comes out on Marble Arch.

greysquirrel

332 posts

169 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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IceBoy said:
I thought single yellow are usually Monday to Saturday and free on Sunday?
They are, just not in most of London. There is parking around Marble Arch or new Bond Street but it isn’t free. You are trying to park around one of the busiest streets in London - you soon won’t even be able to drive down it, let alone park (if the g’ment get their way!).

IceBoy

Original Poster:

2,443 posts

221 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
quotequote all
Fas1975 said:
Park on Great Portland Street. It’s perpendicular to oxford street. And is basically a long yellow line for parking. I parking up in the middle near the BBC building as it’s less busy and always available.
Thanks. Greatly appreciated.
Iceboy

Gafferjim

1,335 posts

265 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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It's simple, Check what it says on the post, it will tell you when the restrictions apply.
As a rule of thumb. single yellow line means no parking for "the working day" (in that location), double yellow lines mean, no parking "more than the working day" (in that location) often "At any time" (which is more than the working day)
Single broken lines mean no parking "less than the working day" this can mean during 'rush hours', or can even mean short time parking allowed, with a time restriction./

ALWAYS check the signage on the post.

loafer123

15,430 posts

215 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
quotequote all
alfaben said:
Personally I'd completely avoid driving into central London and instead park in Westfield White City which will cost £8 for 24 hours or £6 if you register for the Smart Parking.

Central line is a few minutes walk from the shopping centre at Shepard's Bush.

Edited by alfaben on Saturday 1st September 21:28
On a Sunday? Driving into London is a pleasure. Just as quick and easy for me as to go by train and I am 60 miles away.

SkodaIan

714 posts

85 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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Any single yellow line in a half convenient location will already be occupied, or have restrictions applying on a Sunday daytime as well.
You're more likely to find a space on a single red line, as most people don't realise you are ever allowed to stop on them, let alone park there 'out of hours'. The main difficulty with using them though is you need to do a walk past in advance or use Streetview to read the sign and see at what time the restrictions apply.
Best chance of finding a space would be east of Tottenham Court Road as there are fewer shops.

Shaoxter

4,071 posts

124 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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greysquirrel said:
IceBoy said:
I thought single yellow are usually Monday to Saturday and free on Sunday?
They are, just not in most of London. There is parking around Marble Arch or new Bond Street but it isn’t free. You are trying to park around one of the busiest streets in London - you soon won’t even be able to drive down it, let alone park (if the g’ment get their way!).
Rubbish. Lots of parking around the side streets within a 5 min walk.

OP, download appyparking.

silverfoxcc

7,689 posts

145 months

Saturday 1st September 2018
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Gafferjim said:
It's simple, Check what it says on the post, it will tell you when the restrictions apply.
As a rule of thumb. single yellow line means no parking for "the working day" (in that location), double yellow lines mean, no parking "more than the working day" (in that location) often "At any time" (which is more than the working day)
Single broken lines mean no parking "less than the working day" this can mean during 'rush hours', or can even mean short time parking allowed, with a time restriction./

ALWAYS check the signage on the post.
Put it more simply

Double yellows are no parking 24/7/365

Singles are normally parking outside the hurs 09.00-18.00 Mon-Sat.

HOWEVER it is always best to read the yellow plate on that side of gthe road on which yo park, it has been known that the other side has diffrent hours, esp if the local borough boundary runs down the middle of the road

ALSO there are many CPZ now. and once insode the zone there does not have to be yellow notices on the lines, as the Entrance sign to the CPXZ tells you all you need yo knoe IF you notice it when passing. A few LB councils have not put CPZ signs on all 'entry'points' so you could fall foul of the attendants notice!

It is also worth remembering that Westmister parking wardens operate 24/7/365, and are rapacious

Another point that many people fall foulof is the sign that says on a SYL Mon-Sat 08.00-18.00 and park on it on a Bank holiday. The MONDAY bit id=s the clue being a BH does not allow you tp park, UNLESS it actaully states parking on BH holiday allowed

It is a bloody minefield

vikingaero

10,321 posts

169 months

Sunday 2nd September 2018
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Westminster is pretty "reasonable" for SYLs - normally parking is permitted from 18:30hrs. Camden is the worst place for motorists - you'll find some SYLs only permit parking from 23:00hrs! And the border for both boroughs is confusing.