Which of these ingenious parking garages is your favorite? Let us know in the comments! If you enjoyed the video, remember to leave a like and subscribe for more interesting & creative content! Be sure to click that notification bell to stay up to date with our latest uploads! 🙂
The conveyor belt has been all over Japan since the 90s, but not as obvious since they're always in a building, not exposed like the Chinese one. There's always a turntable too, so when you back out it flips you around.
Very ingenious. When I was a child in Iowa an older widow lady lived behind us, across the alley. She turned her backyard into a 4 bay garage. A good income for her. Convenient for the neighbors.
When I was in Okinawa, Japan from 84-86, a hardware store had one of those farris wheel type parking things (enclosed) in the corner of its parking lot, like the one you saw in this video inbetween those tall apartments. I parked my car in it and did not have to wait very long to retrieve the car. The hardware store itself was 3 or 4 stories high. Quit a good use of space.
Yes, these were all over Japan back in the early 80’s when I lived there. I remember first seeing one in the Roppongi area of Tokyo and I was quite fascinated with how it worked and what an efficient use of space it was as a parking option. At the time I remember that it actually reminded me of the old ice cream bar vending machines from the 1960’s, which worked in a very similar fashion. It was like a giant vending machine for cars.
@@jessicacolegrove4152 These kind of stalls always have an attendant that operates it, along with the turntable so no backing into traffic. Besides, the parking ticket knows which car is yours. It's a very simple and easy solution.
I agree. It is probably the cheapest on the list, but would have a higher number of potential customers. A lot of garages in the uk have been turned into rooms as they are too narrow to fit a modern car and open the doors. Even in the 90s I was hearing about people that had houses with garages where they had to line up there ford Sierra with the garage, get out, leaving the hand break off, and push their car into the garage. The Sierra is not a big car when compared to a 2019 focus or similar moderne car….
Yes, I really needed this in a 60s house I lived in 20 years ago. It was a trendy central London place with a compact garage designed for a 60s Mini or Fiat 500 or bubble car. By the 2000s our cars were so much wider. I bought a VW Polo yet still had to park hard against the garage wall on the left in order to exit from the driver’s seat on the right, door half open, me exiting crablike as I couldn’t turn round. There was an interior door directly into the house but I couldn’t get round the front of the car to get to it! This solution is for ordinary people, the others are for millionaires, businesses and municipal bodies.
We were in Prague for a mini break and walking round Wensleslas square we saw these underground parking garages in use . I was very surprised as I'd not seen them any place before ..
all of the underground home garages are a good idea. the security aspect aside they can expand your garage space while freeing above ground space for more living space. i do like the car farisweel thing its a good idea for downtowns or other urban areas
Well, to be honest, with money that owners of such houses and cars evidently must have, the last problem is where to park the car. They cannot have any of these problems, just make bigger garage.
In the UK thats not always possible, considering alot of the houses are protected by the Heritage Act so modifications or add ons are difficult. So alot of people build underground - for those that can afford it.
And there’s the actual garage to the right of it that isn’t camouflaged. That black door is more likely a fly away wall to open up your house to the garden
Many of these parking garages such as Tedra, the ferris wheel parking in China, rotating ground are part of everyday life of drivers in Tokyo. Regular apartments, commercial real estate buildings, and malls have had these since the 80's in Japan.
No examples from the country that invented "ingenious parking garages," Japan??! The Japanese have been using turntables, car lifts, stackers, gondolas & just about every great way to squeeze the max number of cars into the tiniest space since the 1980's... Tokyo has the most impressive parking structures I've seen, hands down. I had a car stacker for over a decade & the biggest issue is always what happens when they break down or you have a power outage... like elevators in a skyscraper, they are brilliant as long as they work!
@@endemion06463 In general, every electronic system should have a manual backup, like the crank that BMW provides fot it's car sunroofs so you can close it if the motor goes out when it's open. You can buy garage doors with battery backup now so they still work when the power goes out, and the gate to my gated community has a battery backup as well. (Good thing; the power goes out there all the time. High winds on the Oregon coast!) Of course, we just had to pay about $700 to replace the batteries for the gate, so no solution is cheap.
I have literally never ever been in a blackout, and I have never heard anyone I know ever talk about being in or experiencing a blackout. Ever. I live in Charleston, SC and people move here from anywhere and everywhere!! A blackout is nothing I have ever ever worried about. Ever!!
These automated parking are great until the glitch. As the people who cars have been stuck inside on for nearly a year because when it failed no one took responsibility
@@BrisLS1 Before safety fencing, light curtains, interlocks, we had this thing called 'common sense'. It stopped stupid people from living long enough to breed and infect the rest of the population.
1:30 - I used to live near this neighbourhood. The streets are really narrow as it was all built back when cars weren't very popular, so parking on the street is a right pain. There's very little room at the front of the properties too, but heaps out the back, so most have extensions ranging out the back. The street also has a strict policy from the council about how it all looks, so more limitations. This is a genius way of dealing with this street!
@@bugjuicer Makes sense. In that area you actually have to lease the road frontage from the council if you have a driveway, when I was working in that area I had to unload the van and then park several blocks away.
I love the concepts shown but can easily imagine how a simple issue could cause a major malfunction. A single particle of gravel or stone or mud being dislodged from a tire and into any of these mechanisms would possibly stop it from functioning. Also, they all depend on the vehicle being a precise size and an excellent driver parking them in a precise position- otherwise, trouble.
I agree with you, it's very cool but I wouldn't trust parking my car on anything that could possibly quit working and leave me stranded while my vehicle is stuck 2 or 3 stories high!
Indeed... It looks great, but you depend on electrical stuff to get your car in and out. If there's a power or mechanical failure, you're stuck... I prefer a simple way to get to my car.
@@iknownothing495 Yeah I agree. It's nice but not that practical. Takes way too long to get your car in most of the clips. I could literally be at my designation by the time the ingenious garage delivered the car. Plus what happens when a lot of people want their cars at once in a public parking garage.
You'd definitely need a generator or some other type of backup power supply in case of a power failure. Of course, for what all of these cost, that addition would be peanuts.
All of these are cool. But for those of us not on Forbes list I think the last option looks the most budget friendly. I don’t know why architects/builders make a double car garage 2 or 3 feet wider to allow for car doors to open.
That first underground elevator parking looks cool, I'm assuming there isn't a size restriction. Other than my lack of full trust in technology, this is a great idea as long as it works properly 24/7. And the underground car lift in India, also very nice and simple concept as long as it works 24/7.
The first garage is cool if you are only one living in that building. Imagine scenario that you have multiple people going to work at similar time. Good luck waiting in queue. Good idea on the surface but sux in reality.
@@Puchacz81 well its actually similar to a valet, valets have basically the same job. The benefit of this automated system is there is less human interaction - which could actually be a bonus, but yes time consuming either way. I also like the underground garage with ramp that lifts up and down, thats a good concept for multiple reasons...but if you can't get out you're screwed thats my only concern with these automated systems. lol
That's exactly the thing. Our neighbors here in Düsseldorf/Germany have an car elevator which brings them with their car up to their storey so they can park right in front of the apartment. But the elevator was broken and there were cars upstairs... For at least a year...
Good ideas in principle, but can you imagine the kind of mess that the average American will get into, I.e. driving off the edge, guillotining the car because it’s parked at an angle, forgetting to stop, starting too soon, etc., etc.
If I was rich enough for what seems extremely over priced garages, I would ONLY get one if it had some sort of manual override in case power went out or any kind of malfunction.
Thanks a lot for this video. My favourite is the turning plate. I would love the combination of a lift and turningplate: The car gets moved down and you could choose between 6 or 8 parkinglots...
I plan to have part of my basement turned into a parking space with a hidden door in my front yard. My house is up on a small hill so I can use the first flight of stairs and the slope of the yard next to it as a hidden garage door. It will ensure I never have to worry about a parking space ever again. Of course, I still have to make sure the street in front is clear so I can get to the hidden driveway.
@@marktierney2986 yes, when it’s raining heavily it’s going to flood the garage floor and the cars will be floating in the garage . Water go down not up
As a American living in California. I'll admit the majority of our Country wouldn't appreciate this, I mean look at how we treat each other better yet a nice parking garage....Facts! just my opinion if you have one comment below
These seem awesome, but anything that was placed in a business environment would be crazy. Imagine the rush at the end of a work day to get to your car! The road rage would start even before you got into the drivers seat.
That stretch garage seemed kinda silly, but I guess if you are in a place with snow it might be a way to keep from having to clear your car. If you can get it to back off. Also good at home instead of a carport. I would just worry about critters enjoying that shelter too.
2:00 That would also be great for storing trailers and the like. We're stuck with a canvas she that we have to put up for the winter then take down again in the summer. I'd love one of these. It would give us the option of taking the trailer out in the winter too.
I like the one garage system that is from China and I think that whole parking lots should also be done like this in order to completely eliminate vehicle thefts, either that, or do it the way that the South Korean or Indian vehicle storage systems are done in the video. However, there are some problems with all three of those, namely, that vehicles that are too tall, too long, and/or too heavy, could also become issues, with the latter two becoming even more of an issue with the South Korean and Indian systems, thus a separate system needs to happen to those vehicles as well. I would also like for such systems to be used to eliminate the stupid and dangerous concept of on-street parking, as a vehicle is a sitting target to get hit by another vehicle with said on-street parking, and it would also make for better traffic flow.
I liked the underground hidden garage and then the Korean garage when you just scan a card and let the automation take care of parking your car and delivering it to you at the end of the day 🙂
@@Allmentux seems pretty simple, just have a charger on the platform, you plug in your car, the platform moves into position and makes contact with some connectors built into the structure, applying power to the charger
Don't know if the first kind parking system was developed in Korea, but I know that it is commonly used in Korea due to high population compared to land size. Not sure if it's the same reason, but I'm pretty sure it is common in other crowded countries, too.
All things automated are prone to break down sooner or later, sometimes at the most inconvenient of moments. Remote controls fail with no warning, batteries die all of a sudden etc. My motorized gate does not open with a remote anymore, so imagine one of those underground systems failing on you.
It would seem that there could be a way to optionally link your smart phone to the Chinese Faris wheel solution so you could let it know when you are headed its way and it could have your car ready when you get there. If you are delayed more than a certain amount of time, it automatically puts it back.
We need something like this in California where crime rate for car theft are very high in it's one of those systems come into play it'll be a game changer.
I had always dreamed of under ground parking garage since it can be as large as your property. Although flooding might be an issue. The hydraulic parking is great, but won't work in the US since US has an appetite for large arse SUVs and trucks. Plus anything with complicate hydraulic system, soon or later, it will fail and there will be lots of headache.
These are very awesome, and congratulations on your success. Can your next video show all the neat tents many of our ex military people are living in. Kind of ironic.
I can't recall where it was, but there is a mansion that has everything outdoors hidden by a hydraulic system that moves stone slabs. It's just a flat plane of differently shaped stones, but can reveal a pool, a fire pit, seating, and a car lift.
Which of these ingenious parking garages is your favorite? Let us know in the comments!
If you enjoyed the video, remember to leave a like and subscribe for more interesting & creative content! Be sure to click that notification bell to stay up to date with our latest uploads! 🙂
I think you forgetting about the world wide energy crises now and in the future 🤦🏼♂
The conveyor belt has been all over Japan since the 90s, but not as obvious since they're always in a building, not exposed like the Chinese one.
There's always a turntable too, so when you back out it flips you around.
Mm
woodlice aren't insects
Not everyone, ONLY the greedy rich people i despise
Very ingenious. When I was a child in Iowa an older widow lady lived behind us, across the alley. She turned her backyard into a 4 bay garage. A good income for her. Convenient for the neighbors.
👏👏
When I was in Okinawa, Japan from 84-86, a hardware store had one of those farris wheel type parking things (enclosed) in the corner of its parking lot, like the one you saw in this video inbetween those tall apartments. I parked my car in it and did not have to wait very long to retrieve the car. The hardware store itself was 3 or 4 stories high. Quit a good use of space.
Yes, these were all over Japan back in the early 80’s when I lived there. I remember first seeing one in the Roppongi area of Tokyo and I was quite fascinated with how it worked and what an efficient use of space it was as a parking option. At the time I remember that it actually reminded me of the old ice cream bar vending machines from the 1960’s, which worked in a very similar fashion. It was like a giant vending machine for cars.
30 years ago I worked in an office in the center of london that had one of those. very simple concept.
only issue i see with them is the addition of Florida man forgetting which parking stall his car is in
@@jessicacolegrove4152 , among other issues, namely, the cars being too tall, too long, and/or too heavy to fit into them, unfortunately.
@@jessicacolegrove4152 These kind of stalls always have an attendant that operates it, along with the turntable so no backing into traffic.
Besides, the parking ticket knows which car is yours. It's a very simple and easy solution.
I LOVE the simplicity of the My Parker which enables 2 cars to parked side by side in what looks to be a traditional or slightly wider single garage.
I agree. It is probably the cheapest on the list, but would have a higher number of potential customers. A lot of garages in the uk have been turned into rooms as they are too narrow to fit a modern car and open the doors. Even in the 90s I was hearing about people that had houses with garages where they had to line up there ford Sierra with the garage, get out, leaving the hand break off, and push their car into the garage. The Sierra is not a big car when compared to a 2019 focus or similar moderne car….
@@petethebeat48 Yep, my favorite too, simplicity
Yes, I really needed this in a 60s house I lived in 20 years ago. It was a trendy central London place with a compact garage designed for a 60s Mini or Fiat 500 or bubble car. By the 2000s our cars were so much wider. I bought a VW Polo yet still had to park hard against the garage wall on the left in order to exit from the driver’s seat on the right, door half open, me exiting crablike as I couldn’t turn round. There was an interior door directly into the house but I couldn’t get round the front of the car to get to it! This solution is for ordinary people, the others are for millionaires, businesses and municipal bodies.
Batman likes this video.
Batman laughs at how simple and made for poor people (in comparison lol) this is
the hidden one is the best so far. anyone who built it, big respect from me.
We were in Prague for a mini break and walking round Wensleslas square we saw these underground parking garages in use . I was very surprised as I'd not seen them any place before ..
Love the under ground secret parking entrance that’s always been on my list.
Me too, I have flash backs of the batman bat cave.
all of the underground home garages are a good idea. the security aspect aside they can expand your garage space while freeing above ground space for more living space. i do like the car farisweel thing its a good idea for downtowns or other urban areas
Well, to be honest, with money that owners of such houses and cars evidently must have, the last problem is where to park the car. They cannot have any of these problems, just make bigger garage.
In the UK thats not always possible, considering alot of the houses are protected by the Heritage Act so modifications or add ons are difficult. So alot of people build underground - for those that can afford it.
But what’s the point of that?
Mark 8:36
King James Version
36 For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?
@@Lawrence-Joseph-Norse I like that bible verse.
@@Coocakes69 are you saved?
2:49 there’s no driveway. Plus, there’s grass in front of it.
STUPID DESIGN
could be synthetic grass, looks better than a driveway
And there’s the actual garage to the right of it that isn’t camouflaged. That black door is more likely a fly away wall to open up your house to the garden
I'm guessing that's astroturf so it's safe to drive on, just there to fool people into thinking there is no garage.
Many of these parking garages such as Tedra, the ferris wheel parking in China, rotating ground are part of everyday life of drivers in Tokyo. Regular apartments, commercial real estate buildings, and malls have had these since the 80's in Japan.
No examples from the country that invented "ingenious parking garages," Japan??! The Japanese have been using turntables, car lifts, stackers, gondolas & just about every great way to squeeze the max number of cars into the tiniest space since the 1980's... Tokyo has the most impressive parking structures I've seen, hands down. I had a car stacker for over a decade & the biggest issue is always what happens when they break down or you have a power outage... like elevators in a skyscraper, they are brilliant as long as they work!
and when a blackout happens you will be left on foot 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Air pressure backup system? Or hand powered pulley system? But I agree if there isn't any kind of backup it'd be dumb.
It might work with a rechargeable battery 😀
Unless you have a battery backup, or a Tesla power wall, yes.
@@endemion06463 In general, every electronic system should have a manual backup, like the crank that BMW provides fot it's car sunroofs so you can close it if the motor goes out when it's open. You can buy garage doors with battery backup now so they still work when the power goes out, and the gate to my gated community has a battery backup as well. (Good thing; the power goes out there all the time. High winds on the Oregon coast!) Of course, we just had to pay about $700 to replace the batteries for the gate, so no solution is cheap.
I have literally never ever been in a blackout, and I have never heard anyone I know ever talk about being in or experiencing a blackout. Ever. I live in Charleston, SC and people move here from anywhere and everywhere!! A blackout is nothing I have ever ever worried about. Ever!!
I have experienced the elevator parking in NY city in the early seventies. Pretty cool.
I love the vending machine type public storage, as well as the one where the cars would rotate off of different shelves, I love that.
They're all great, must be wonderful to have the money and an idea to see through to engineering reality like that, love the underground garages.
These automated parking are great until the glitch. As the people who cars have been stuck inside on for nearly a year because when it failed no one took responsibility
Yes, they look dangerous. Need some fencing to keep arms and legs out of them.
@@BrisLS1 Before safety fencing, light curtains, interlocks, we had this thing called 'common sense'. It stopped stupid people from living long enough to breed and infect the rest of the population.
1:30 - I used to live near this neighbourhood. The streets are really narrow as it was all built back when cars weren't very popular, so parking on the street is a right pain. There's very little room at the front of the properties too, but heaps out the back, so most have extensions ranging out the back. The street also has a strict policy from the council about how it all looks, so more limitations. This is a genius way of dealing with this street!
Is it ponsonby or freemans bay?
@@peterkotara back of Ponsonby, one of those side streets near the BP
@@bugjuicer Makes sense. In that area you actually have to lease the road frontage from the council if you have a driveway, when I was working in that area I had to unload the van and then park several blocks away.
I love the underground parking hidden garage. I can’t even begin to imagine what it would cost to do this in my region of the US
It's probably like 100k here in California
With money being no object, It would be $1 on my list also. It's a great buy for super car owners.
Overall, 6:00 appears to be the most efficient in both space usage and simplicity.
I love the concepts shown but can easily imagine how a simple issue could cause a major malfunction. A single particle of gravel or stone or mud being dislodged from a tire and into any of these mechanisms would possibly stop it from functioning. Also, they all depend on the vehicle being a precise size and an excellent driver parking them in a precise position- otherwise, trouble.
Does gravel or stones stop a trash truck or earth moving equipment? Let the engineers do their jobs....
I agree with you, it's very cool but I wouldn't trust parking my car on anything that could possibly quit working and leave me stranded while my vehicle is stuck 2 or 3 stories high!
Indeed... It looks great, but you depend on electrical stuff to get your car in and out. If there's a power or mechanical failure, you're stuck... I prefer a simple way to get to my car.
@@iknownothing495
Yeah I agree.
It's nice but not that practical.
Takes way too long to get your car in most of the clips.
I could literally be at my designation by the time the ingenious garage delivered the car.
Plus what happens when a lot of people want their cars at once in a public parking garage.
You'd definitely need a generator or some other type of backup power supply in case of a power failure. Of course, for what all of these cost, that addition would be peanuts.
That Ford Mustang Fastback is amazing
Great video, keep it up!
🚘
All of these are cool. But for those of us not on Forbes list I think the last option looks the most budget friendly. I don’t know why architects/builders make a double car garage 2 or 3 feet wider to allow for car doors to open.
Because someone will come and say. If the architect would have build the garage 3 or 4 feet bigger I could at least squeeze another car into it ;)
The final parking garage looks to be the best, and, most afffordable and quickest solution. It could be installed faster by the looks of it too.
That first underground elevator parking looks cool, I'm assuming there isn't a size restriction. Other than my lack of full trust in technology, this is a great idea as long as it works properly 24/7. And the underground car lift in India, also very nice and simple concept as long as it works 24/7.
The first garage is cool if you are only one living in that building. Imagine scenario that you have multiple people going to work at similar time. Good luck waiting in queue. Good idea on the surface but sux in reality.
@@Puchacz81 well its actually similar to a valet, valets have basically the same job. The benefit of this automated system is there is less human interaction - which could actually be a bonus, but yes time consuming either way. I also like the underground garage with ramp that lifts up and down, thats a good concept for multiple reasons...but if you can't get out you're screwed thats my only concern with these automated systems. lol
yeah with so many moving part lots can go wrong
@@LordO-thPalace Agree, but i am more concerned that it is waste of time for multi residential buildings.
That's exactly the thing. Our neighbors here in Düsseldorf/Germany have an car elevator which brings them with their car up to their storey so they can park right in front of the apartment. But the elevator was broken and there were cars upstairs... For at least a year...
Great video.
I love all of those designs, thank you for your time presenting it on such a compact and beautiful way.🙏🙏🙏💯💯💯
You are so welcome :)
I like the "hidden" garage door of the beach-front property - mainly because it seems to have a conspicuous garage door right next to it.
But is it actually a garage? Because it has grass in front of it, and it doesn't look like it sees regular traffic.
Amazing, keep safe and may God bless you always, I do DIY and recycling, friend from Philippines
Good ideas in principle, but can you imagine the kind of mess that the average American will get into, I.e. driving off the edge, guillotining the car because it’s parked at an angle, forgetting to stop, starting too soon, etc., etc.
Future garages like these would need charging arrangements as well...
The power grid provide adequate electricity for EV charging?
Yeah!!! I love that there are super rich people with awesome stuff!!! Brilliiiaaaant!!!!
That second garage which showed the fence retracting just like it was something from Tracey Island was by far my favorite.
Awesome creativity 👍🏻
It'd be nice to know prices. It seems garages cost way more than the cars themselves!
just invest into 400k garage for 5k car bro dont question it
This is my point too
I think the most practical, affordable lift is.. the very last one which is my favorite, fan of the channel too.
Najlepszy ten z Nowej Zelandii.
If I was rich enough for what seems extremely over priced garages, I would ONLY get one if it had some sort of manual override in case power went out or any kind of malfunction.
Good video 👍 👍 interesting ways of parking cars
The Portugal one is amazing!
Wonderful solutions to parking problems.
Oh yes, I'm buying some cars and these for all of them tomorrow 🤣
Thanks a lot for this video. My favourite is the turning plate. I would love the combination of a lift and turningplate: The car gets moved down and you could choose between 6 or 8 parkinglots...
Great job! Congrats!
I really liked the home ramp. Would love to have that. Also the New Zealand house that opened was cool.
You spotted the Golf with the NZ plate too, eh. That house has to be in Mt Eden or perhaps Kingsland or surrounding suburbs.
I've only seen the first three so far and these are just amazing 😁
0:27
"yeah im getting my car there"
*machine breaks*
"WAIT NONONONONONONONO."
Having adequate space to begin with is the ultimate luxury. These clever solutions are merely work-arounds for an unfortunate lack of space.
No some are for security purposes
Sometimes simplicity is key. The last solution is my favorite :)
Definitely a Visionary designed area
Loved these!!! Sooo cool 👍👍👍👍👍👍
Love them all
They've made America great again underground
Some great innovative designs
I plan to have part of my basement turned into a parking space with a hidden door in my front yard. My house is up on a small hill so I can use the first flight of stairs and the slope of the yard next to it as a hidden garage door. It will ensure I never have to worry about a parking space ever again. Of course, I still have to make sure the street in front is clear so I can get to the hidden driveway.
Problem with underground parking is the risk of flooring from rain
@@The_North0 Flooding?
@@marktierney2986 yes, when it’s raining heavily it’s going to flood the garage floor and the cars will be floating in the garage . Water go down not up
As a American living in California. I'll admit the majority of our Country wouldn't appreciate this, I mean look at how we treat each other better yet a nice parking garage....Facts! just my opinion if you have one comment below
Love those Porsche Carreras. Especially with a wide body kit. Singer makes beautiful models
I liked the underground garages.
These seem awesome, but anything that was placed in a business environment would be crazy. Imagine the rush at the end of a work day to get to your car! The road rage would start even before you got into the drivers seat.
definitely gotta be the ramp one. the others are just needlessly complex but the ramp solves its problem well
Amazing car barrages here that China out door is top level cool . All these countries r amazing stuff here great vlog here
the problem with some of the underground ones is flooding and if your ramp or what ever is broken you arent getting that car out.
Been planning something like this for months love it
That stretch garage seemed kinda silly, but I guess if you are in a place with snow it might be a way to keep from having to clear your car. If you can get it to back off. Also good at home instead of a carport. I would just worry about critters enjoying that shelter too.
The last one seems the most practical
i wish homes here across greensboro, nc would have these hidden garrages to protect against car theives
Everyone gansta till somebody parks on the top of the thumbnail garage
love the underground garages BUT I have to say I'm most impressed with the Korean automated parking
2:00 That would also be great for storing trailers and the like. We're stuck with a canvas she that we have to put up for the winter then take down again in the summer. I'd love one of these. It would give us the option of taking the trailer out in the winter too.
All good. Can't compare. Each caters different needs.
very nice technologie
I like the one garage system that is from China and I think that whole parking lots should also be done like this in order to completely eliminate vehicle thefts, either that, or do it the way that the South Korean or Indian vehicle storage systems are done in the video. However, there are some problems with all three of those, namely, that vehicles that are too tall, too long, and/or too heavy, could also become issues, with the latter two becoming even more of an issue with the South Korean and Indian systems, thus a separate system needs to happen to those vehicles as well. I would also like for such systems to be used to eliminate the stupid and dangerous concept of on-street parking, as a vehicle is a sitting target to get hit by another vehicle with said on-street parking, and it would also make for better traffic flow.
Smart design
I liked the underground hidden garage and then the Korean garage when you just scan a card and let the automation take care of parking your car and delivering it to you at the end of the day 🙂
Yeah that's awesome! But now try to charge electric cars there or even plug them in 😁
@@Allmentux seems pretty simple, just have a charger on the platform, you plug in your car, the platform moves into position and makes contact with some connectors built into the structure, applying power to the charger
Problem with underground parking is flooring from rain
Don't know if the first kind parking system was developed in Korea, but I know that it is commonly used in Korea due to high population compared to land size. Not sure if it's the same reason, but I'm pretty sure it is common in other crowded countries, too.
Meu like é o 158!
I like the hidden ramp where the door opens and a trail of cars come out suddenly
I want to tour them all, so cool!!
Congratulation!
C'est superbe. Une excellente idée.
I like the last one best as it would be ideal for my situation. But they are all great ideas.
All things automated are prone to break down sooner or later, sometimes at the most inconvenient of moments. Remote controls fail with no warning, batteries die all of a sudden etc. My motorized gate does not open with a remote anymore, so imagine one of those underground systems failing on you.
It would seem that there could be a way to optionally link your smart phone to the Chinese Faris wheel solution so you could let it know when you are headed its way and it could have your car ready when you get there. If you are delayed more than a certain amount of time, it automatically puts it back.
We need something like this in California where crime rate for car theft are very high in it's one of those systems come into play it'll be a game changer.
I had always dreamed of under ground parking garage since it can be as large as your property. Although flooding might be an issue.
The hydraulic parking is great, but won't work in the US since US has an appetite for large arse SUVs and trucks. Plus anything with complicate hydraulic system, soon or later, it will fail and there will be lots of headache.
I would love this in Blackpool as the car parks here are chicanes
confirmed: i’ll watch anything
Great video. Just a little correction: The first parking system is located in Thailand not in Korea.
Thanks for the info!
these smart garages are trouble in the waiting
Thanks I got New youtube channel from this video to learn more knowledge
I always struggle for somewhere to park my supercars.
Oh, I goodly want to hear so!
These are very awesome, and congratulations on your success. Can your next video show all the neat tents many of our ex military people are living in. Kind of ironic.
Intresting designs, but work only in places where winters are mild.
I can't recall where it was, but there is a mansion that has everything outdoors hidden by a hydraulic system that moves stone slabs. It's just a flat plane of differently shaped stones, but can reveal a pool, a fire pit, seating, and a car lift.
"Ingenious Parking Garages that only a handful of people can affort".
The secret car bunker looks cool but hugely expensive.
imagine standing in a lineup to have your car delivered 30 mins later. this only works under very specific circumstances
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