Skip to main content

A car and a computer help shopper complete wacky parking project

Everyone needs a project. Gareth Wild’s involved a quest to park his Skoda Octavia in every single space at his local supermarket. And six years after starting out, he’s finally finished.

The 39-year-old Brit set himself the offbeat challenge in a bid to make his weekly supermarket visits less mundane.

And he took the effort seriously, too, utilizing the power of Google Maps and spreadsheets to plan a strategy that would enable him to target all 211 parking spaces as efficiently as possible.

In a series of tweets this week, Wild revealed details of his impressive achievement, which he described as his magnum opus.

For the last six years I’ve kept a spreadsheet listing every parking spot I’ve used at the local supermarket in a bid to park in them all. This week I completed my Magnum Opus! A thread.

— Gareth Wild (@GarethWild) April 27, 2021

The London-based company director explained how in 2015, after quite a few years of visiting the same local supermarket, he started thinking about “how many of the different spots I’d parked in and how long it would take to park in them all.” The parking project was born.

Wild started by hitting Google Maps to get a satellite shot of the entirety of the parking lot. He then converted it to a diagram to get a clearer view of all of the spaces.

The orange boxes dotted around the car park are trolley bays, the black space is an irregular shaped patch which is too small for a car and is therefore void and then there are a number of family, disabled and a motorcycle bays. pic.twitter.com/EWJE2xOCYo

— Gareth Wild (@GarethWild) April 27, 2021

“I don’t own a motorcycle and I’m not disabled but I do have children so I can legitimately use the family spaces,” Wild said, adding that this meant there was a total of 211 spaces that he needed to park in, or “conquer,” as he put it.

He also found a way to make it easy for him to keep track of which space he was parking in so that he could quickly update his spreadsheet when he got home.

The spreadsheet was, of course, a key part of the project, with Wild this week proudly posting the completed file on Twitter.

A weekly shop (with a few extra visits here and there) had led Wild to believe that he could probably complete the challenge within about four years, but his forgivable failure to factor in a global pandemic meant it ended up taking considerably longer.

And the project produced some emotional moments, too. Responding to a question on Twitter, Wild said that “getting all of area B was the same sort of joy I had at the birth of my firstborn,” adding, “Maybe better.”

As an act of public service, the parking guru has even taken the time to produce a special map for the store’s parking lot, marking out the best and worst spaces for future visitors.

It’s not clear what kind of challenge Wild be taking on next, though he did mention that he currently has his eye on the parking lot of another supermarket that’s just opened close to his home.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
The Kia EV3 could be the cheap electric SUV we’ve been waiting for
White Kia EV3

The Kia EV9 was already one of the cheapest ways to get an electric SUV, but now the company is taking things to the next level. After teasing the Kia EV3 last year, the car is now official.

The EV3 is built to be a slightly smaller, cheaper version of the EV9 -- following the path of the Rivian R2, which arrived after the Rivian R1S. It's certainly not as technologically advanced as the EV9, but it still looks unmistakably like a modern Kia, and is clearly a sibling of the larger SUV. On the outside, the vehicle has the same split taillights and very similar Tiger Face front. But it is quite a bit smaller. The vehicle will be available in nine finishes -- however only "Aventurine Green" and "Terracotta" are being announced right now.

Read more
Kia EV3: release date, performance, range, and more
White Kia EV3

Kia is on a roll. Hot on the heels of the success of the Kia EV6 and EV9, the company is already announcing what could be its cheapest electric vehicle yet -- the Kia EV3.

The Kia EV line seems to follow the rule of lower numbers indicating a lower price — and if so, the EV3 will end up being the cheapest electric car Kia has released to date. That, however, thankfully doesn’t mean that the EV3 will be a low-end car — it just means that Kia may be pushing the boundaries on electric car pricing.

Read more
Kia EV3 vs Tesla Model Y: Can Kia’s new entry-level car take on Tesla?
White Kia EV3

The Kia EV3 is finally coming, and it could well end up being the best small-size electric SUV to buy when it finally rolls out. It's smaller than the Kia EV9, but it offers many of the same design elements and features. But there's another small-size electric car that's currently one of the most popular vehicles out there -- the Tesla Model Y.

How does the Kia EV3 compare with the Tesla Model Y? And is one vehicle actually better than the other? We put the Kia EV3 and the Tesla Model Y head-to-head to find out.
Design
The design of the Kia EV3 is very different than that of the Model Y, though they're both reasonably good-looking vehicles.

Read more