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How to Find Parking

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Your new apartment is amazing. It’s the right size, has all the features you’ve been looking for and is in a great location. There’s only one problem - you’ve got nowhere to park your car. It’s a situation that can quickly turn a dream apartment into a nightmare. Apartments.com has some tips to help make finding a home for your car even easier than finding a home for yourself.

Consider All Your Parking Options
Street
parking is sometimes the only option for many apartment-dwellers but there may be other choices.

  • Read the parking signs carefully. Many people pass up spots that are legal because they misread the posted hours or other information. If a residential parking sticker is available, buy it. The extra fee will be worth the time you’ll spend searching for parking spots.
  • Your landlord may have parking spots available near your apartment for an additional monthly fee. If you were told your building’s lot was full, inquire if another building in your area has extra spots. You may be able to rent one there and have only a short walk to your apartment.
  • Look on local advertising Web sites to see if anyone is renting out a spot near you. In some cities, listings for parking spots are becoming almost as common as listings for apartments.
  • Technology will soon be able to help you find a parking spot. A new service called “SpotScout” will connect drivers through any web-enabled device. A driver who is leaving a space in the near future can “Spotcast” their space to other drivers. When the space is successfully received by another driver, the drivers can rate each other as to how the transfer worked. The service is being test-marketed in Boston, New York and San Francisco.

Look for Alternatives
If none of the above options work, looking into other transportation options is your next best bet.

  • Taking a bus or train may make your commute easier as well as relieve your parking issue. Investigate the routes near you for reasonable options.
  • Carpooling can also save you from the need to park your car every night. Check in newspapers and online for local ads for people interested in carpooling. You can also post an ad at a community center. Make sure to state in your ad what days you are willing to drive and the general route you’d like to take.


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juan molina


I am in wheelchair therefore I prefer the first flat

 
Christina


To all new apt shoppers, if you have car, take a good look at the parking situation of the apts you visit. Its best to find an apt that has lots of parking spaces…a reserved space is even better. Trust me, the last thing you want to do at the end of a night out is drive around the neighborhood looking for a parking spot.

 
Danielle


I lived in an apt. with reserved parking and it was just as much as a nightmare! If one person was in your spot YOU would get in trouble for parking in someone elses!! And most of the time if your friends come over, there is usually nowhere for them to park! BEWARE when it comes to reserved and visitor parking! 3 visitor spots for an entire complex is not going to be fun!

 
Katt


I always had people parking in my reserved spaces when I first moved in. I had one car and three reserves…you’d think one of them would be open, right? Confronting the neighbors didn’t work, either.

I confess…I went out and purchased one of those little window markers in bright purple, and as I walked past the intrusive car I made a nice purple streak on their driver side door. It doesn’t damage their car, they just wash it off, and they got the point.

steve


I tried that once or twice. eventually i had to have them towed.

 
 
Paul


hunters searching an apartment call your local police find out what the crime is like in thst area, also ride thru on a weekend because that will be the main idea what your parking will be like,I go to school in the evening so when I get home there is no where to park.

 
mayra


i dont know if anyone knows but is it legal for them to charge for parking? and for them not to have visitor parking???

 
Brandon


I live in a apt. complex where it like 5 units and enough room to park 2 vehicles, so you know what i do if someone gets in my space, haha, put a few roofin nails in front of there tires the night there staying over. Try that.

 
ashley anderson


how much does parking normaly cost when u live at an apartment

 
 

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