Update: This article has been updated with a close-up of the new signage that replaced the previous plethora of signage. The update is provided at the end of the original article below.
As I shuffled through my 35mm transparencies shot during the glory days of Kodachrome 64 in preparation for my previously unthinkable undertaking of converting the entire collection over to digital format I stumbled upon a couple of images of a most unusual, yet memorable, on-street parking spot in San Francisco.

The shots were taken back on May 16th, 1994 (a Monday) as indicated on the markings on the slide frames and as I recall with the intention of submitting them to Road & Track magazine for publication consideration in their PS (‘Post Scripts’) feature at the back of the magazine. While the detailed complexity of the situation was not able to be captured in a single frame, today’s digital platform not only enables image enhancement but also provides for multimedia articulation.
Having lived in various neighborhoods in San Francisco for the better part of a decade, I am well versed in the elevated art of on-street parking in a city whose charming and defining Edwardian and Victorian structures were built prior to the automobile’s entitlement claims to dedicated space within a homes architectural design. In a city where circling in vain for an hour for that elusive parking spot before resigning to either a cab ride from a distant location or spinning the wheel of chance on another ticket, affixing one’s vehicle to a legal on-street parking spot instantly creates a willable possession or at the very least the mere accomplishment justifies an enviable broadcast boast on Twitter.




With a recharged curiosity, surely I will make a point during my next trip to San Francisco to digitally shoot the new sign and update this post.
Update:

Despite my frequent travels to San Francisco it was not until 2nd quarter 2013 (4 and a half years after the original post) that a window of time in my overbooked meeting schedules allowed me to revisit the site in question. Indeed, as evidenced in the photograph below, the plethora of signage has been replaced with a single sign post along with a parking meter and the painted curb. Gone are the excruciating detailed sign post, the permit parking sign, and the street cleaning sign which are all forever archived in the original post.

Even better the new signage (close-up image below), which is updated annually with an adhesive replacement sticker, only requires checking your calendar against the 10 (ten) restricted parking dates listed. The previous signage listed a whopping 68 (sixty-eight) regulated dates – almost 20% of the year! That’s a 1 in 5 chance that the day you had parked there was restricted – and that is not including the permit parking restriction, the time meter, the street cleaning restriction, or the red curb.
When all combined the likelihood of being able to previously park there, legally of course and without getting a ticket, starts to approximate the chance of winning the lottery – which of course is what it truly feels like every time you do find legal street parking in San Francisco.
Update:

Despite my frequent travels to San Francisco it was not until 2nd quarter 2013 (4 and a half years after the original post) that a window of time in my overbooked meeting schedules allowed me to revisit the site in question. Indeed, as evidenced in the photograph below, the plethora of signage has been replaced with a single sign post along with a parking meter and the painted curb. Gone are the excruciating detailed sign post, the permit parking sign, and the street cleaning sign which are all forever archived in the original post.

Even better the new signage (close-up image below), which is updated annually with an adhesive replacement sticker, only requires checking your calendar against the 10 (ten) restricted parking dates listed. The previous signage listed a whopping 68 (sixty-eight) regulated dates – almost 20% of the year! That’s a 1 in 5 chance that the day you had parked there was restricted – and that is not including the permit parking restriction, the time meter, the street cleaning restriction, or the red curb.
When all combined the likelihood of being able to previously park there, legally of course and without getting a ticket, starts to approximate the chance of winning the lottery – which of course is what it truly feels like every time you do find legal street parking in San Francisco.
Hilarious! Brings back memories...
ReplyDeleteFunny!
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