No they didn't!had to that Withdean and the Goldstone.
no one seemed to worry about it then
In the National Park?Yes....Braypool is the perfect solution
No they didn't!
In the National Park?
Too be fair though, as someone who knows the area very well, the lower half of COldean is like that all the time. Park Road, Rushlake Road, there is never anywhere to pass. The only difference the football makes, is maybe, just maybe the fans are blocking the roadfs, before the residents get a chance to!I have no idea if people are parking inconsiderately or not - blocking drives and the like - but it's clear the roads were absolutely swamped with cars. Cars lined most roads on both sides - sometimes bumped onto kerbs or verges and it made traffic difficult as there were very few places where cars could pass each other, and there were plenty of cars crawling around the area to try and find any available spots.
So, whether my drive was blocked or not, if I was a resident and needed to get in and/or out of the area, I don't think I'd be particularly happy.
Exactly this. But I doubt if many Coldean residents with cars who live in area and roads around the pub ,are the ones complaining, as they know a lot of them take libertites with the parking down there, and the last thing they want is to draw attention to it.If we're going to get heavy about parking in Coldean then lets start booking the residents that park on pavements and grass verges.
Because at the time it was a dirty word.
Yes....Braypool is the perfect solution
Yep. Every 10 minutes (but make sure it's a 49 to East Moulsecoomb, not a 49A to Lower Bevendean). Stay on until the Bolney Road stop - just a bit more than 10 minutes walk away from the stadium. Journey time is 50 minutes from Portslade Station.Is it worth catching the No.49 from Portslade
Surely they'd just give permits to people who live there and give parking tickets to people who park there without a permit, like in central Brighton?
We come up from Plymouth every home game, saturdays and Tuesday evening, sometimes we don't get into Brighton till 15-20 mins to kick off, how the hell are we going to get a p&r or train to the ground in time for kick off. Moulescombe & Coldean parking iss a godsend for people like uss. We don't all live in or around brighton.
What about:-Of course they could, but the point was that Coldean/Moulsecoomb wouldn't be turned into a controlled parking zones with permits, it would be a temporary one. I don't see how this can achieved without either permits or barriers and two pages later no-one has offered any suggestion as to how this will be managed.
What about:-
(1) identifying the particular bits of particular streets where parking by football supporters is causing a genuine problem;
(2) offering residents of those streets the option of a one-hour parking limit applying on matchdays only (from an hour before kick-off until an hour after the final whistle) - except for permit holders;
(3) issuing a permit to all residents who want one - free of charge to them, but paid for by the football club;
(4) have the football club fund the enforcement costs (the legal costs of introducing the scheme, the signs, and the costs of employing parking wardens with powers to issue parking tickets to drivers of cars parked without a permit displayed)?
Such a scheme would, of course, only apply in those areas where there is a genuine problem and where residents wanted restrictions introduced. If Gwylan is right and there isn't the wish to have such a scheme, it wouldn't happen.
What about:-
(1) identifying the particular bits of particular streets where parking by football supporters is causing a genuine problem;
(2) offering residents of those streets the option of a one-hour parking limit applying on matchdays only (from an hour before kick-off until an hour after the final whistle) - except for permit holders;
(3) issuing a permit to all residents who want one - free of charge to them, but paid for by the football club;
(4) have the football club fund the enforcement costs (the legal costs of introducing the scheme, the signs, and the costs of employing parking wardens with powers to issue parking tickets to drivers of cars parked without a permit displayed)?
Such a scheme would, of course, only apply in those areas where there is a genuine problem and where residents wanted restrictions introduced. If Gwylan is right and there isn't the wish to have such a scheme, it wouldn't happen.
A £100 parking permit gives people the option of parking without charge for several hours a day, six days a week, 52 weeks of the year. The scheme I've floated would apply on no more than 30 occasions a year and then only for a few hours.And the council would have to manage the fallout from the Brighton residents who have to pay over a £100 for parking permits and wonder how residents of East Brighton get theirs for nothing. Explanations that the club will be paying for them would, I suspect, fall on deaf ears.