Can I park anywhere I want in a shopping center parking lot?

In some shopping centers you will see a parking space that says something like “For laundry mat parking only”. Or something to that effect. My question is if its a public parking center can i legally park there even if i do not want to go into the laundry mat? I have even seen some that say your car can be towed.

A shopping centre lot, generally speaking, is not a public parking lot; it’s a private parking lot belonging to the owner of the shopping mall. In theory they could tow you if you don’t park according to their wishes.

Who is “they”? The people leasing the laundromat? The owners of the property? If the owners are the only ones who can authorize a towing, do they give a darn what building you’re patronizing, as long as you’re spending money? These are all honest questions, I don’t know if those that can authorize care where you park. This seems like a different situation than the “Mother to Be” parking spots, but I can’t pinpoint why.

I did not mean to imply a mall but like a grocery store parking lot with a bunch of little stores around it.

Yes, the owners of the property, or their delegates. Could well be they’ve given blanket permission to the laundromat to request tows on their behalf.

It could easily be one of the clauses in the lease agreement between the laundromat and the property owners that the spaces in front of the laundromat are reserved for them and that the laundromat has the right to tow cars parked there.

Grrr. How about the “mothers and expectant mothers” spots, which are right near the door? That really pissed me off the other day, so I rationalized that I am a mother of several cats and I have expectations of one sort or another, and I parked there.

Guess what? Nothing bad happened.

It depends a lot on where you are, as you might imagine. Some jurisdictions pretty much leave it up to the owners or those who lease space from them, others impose very specific requirements before they can tow.

Portland:

http://www.portlandonline.com/auditor/index.cfm?a=fbjga&c=dedgj (emphasis added.)
San Rafael, CA:

http://www.cityofsanrafael.org/Government/Parking_Services/Abandoned_Vehicles/Private_Property.htm

Austin:

http://www.utexas.edu/student/lss/faq/legaltow.html
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/161026_privatelot18.html

I think it’s about politeness and courtesy towards other human beings.

I saw a guy, and his teenaged daughter, take a handicapped spot at a mall at Christmas. I looked at the vehicle: no handicap permit. I glared at the guy until he started faking a limp! Asshole.

I tend to obey these signs, even though the chances of there being 6 pregnant women shopping at the same time at the same grocery store would be extremely rare.

If it upsets you that much, patronize a different establishment. You have no right to violate their rules.

Maybe nothing bad happened to YOU. But who knows? It is possible that a pregnant woman had to shop elsewhere because you were in her spot.

I’ll obey ones for expectant mothers, or drycleaners 5 minute parking, etc.

However I’ve never had a problem using ones at BestBuy that say “reserved for photo finishing services” if I am just running in to buy something quick. I’m probably a lot quicker than someone who is just there to pick up their photos.

I’ve also used the employee of the month parking spot at businesses where I am just running in. When does the employee’s parking convenience override a customer?

That’s the owner/manager’s decision, not yours. If they feel that it is important to give this perk to an employee for the sake of long-term company morale, even at the possible expense of customer convenience, then so be it.

How can i actually know that the owner has given them permission to make a reserved spot? I mean honestly no one will probably know that it is my car or not. The person running the laundry place could probably put up that sign regardless if he has any right to or not right?

Or should could have had to walk a total of 300 meters instead of 280 meters by being 20 meters further out. I don’t get this – they still have to walk around inside of the store.

Totally. Before we had a washer and dryer at the house we started patronizing a really nice and new laundromat that opened close to home. It was a little strip mall that had the laundry, a place that sold blinds and window treatments, a hair salon, a bar, a tobacco shop and a 7-11.

I became friendly with the guy who owned the laundry place. He had all sorts of signs put up that the spaces on his store frontage were for laundry customers **only ** and he constantly harassed the mall owner (actually the guy who owned the tobacco store) that nobody else should be able to park in front of his place. The owner just shrugged because Friday and Saturday nights the bar customers took all the parking spaces and he didn’t really care who parked where. Didn’t stop Kevin from doing all sorts of things to dissuade people from parking there and they mostly ignored him.

If the owner of the property were unhappy about the sign being up he would have no problem addressing that with the owner of the laundromat. The owner could easily insist that the sign be taken down, and would do so if he felt it were detrimental to his overall business interests. Here is a likely scenario:

  1. Owner of shopping center is trying to lease vacant storefront.
  2. Owner of laundromat is willing to pay $X in lease under condition that he can provide convenient, reserved parking in front of his store. The ability to provide convenient parking is probably pretty key to running a successful laundromat. If a site doesn’t offer convenient parking, he will rent elsewhere.
  3. Owner of shopping center thinks this is a good deal. His alternatives are to postpone renting the space out until he gets a different tenant (losing money while the space is vacant) or possibly to rent to the laundromat owner for something less than $X.

I love it when you’re strict.

Why, because pregnant women can’t walk?

I can’t speak for larger businesses, but when I have had reserved spaces for my small business, I had to rent them. I might not have known that you were parking there, but if someone coming to my business told me there was somebody parked there, you’d be enjoying dealing an impound lot as your next act. Those spaces were rented for the convenience of my customers, not other people who couldn’t be bothered to park half a block away.

The OP is asking if said rules are valid.

:rolleyes:

I just pull out my cellphone and call the cops. You’d be surprised at how quickly someone will move their car when you are reading their license plate number into the phone.