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Yijiahe property complaint

First of all, you bought a fixed parking space, not a license plate for parking. In other words, the ownership of this parking space belongs to you. As long as it is not flammable and explosive, the property has no right to interfere. So it's unreasonable.

Secondly, I can understand this behavior of the property. There is a simple reason. If you register two license plates, you can drive the car into the garage. If you only have one parking space, then the other will inevitably involve other parking spaces and passages. This is difficult to manage for the property. According to what you said, your underground garage should be strictly managed, with one car and one parking space, registered and opened, and people without parking spaces can't get in at all. The advantage of this garage is that there will never be foreign vehicles or other vehicles without parking spaces coming in to occupy parking spaces, but the disadvantage is that the management in many places may be too rigid and inflexible.

Third, I think you should think about how to do it according to your actual situation. For example, you only change cars occasionally, and the number and days are very few. I think you should understand the rigidity and strictness of the property, because what seems unreasonable is to better protect the interests of the owners themselves. If you let the car in casually, the parking space will be occupied and the owner will suffer. If I change trains frequently, I think I can go to the property management to discuss what to do. For example, a friend of mine has several cars in the company. He doesn't necessarily choose which car to drive on a certain day, or he often chooses which car to drive in different situations. If this is the case, you can consider discussing it with the property management and see what to do. A simple way is to sign a service contract after the property management allows it. Make sure you only park one car, and then the property will issue a card to you, or some systems can print the license plate, and you can get off and scan it before entering the garage, and then open the door. Some systems can't. In short, you can negotiate with the property according to the actual situation, so that you can have a little more trouble and consider the trouble of the property, and negotiate instead of creating contradictions. What the property is afraid of is nothing more than two cars in one parking space. You help them find a way to solve this concern, and naturally it will be easy.

I think the property is doing the right thing. You only have one parking space. If you get into two cars, you will inevitably occupy someone else's parking space. Isn't this a trouble for the property and other owners?

Some residential systems can allow several cars to enter, but when one car enters, other cars are blocked out. But some residential systems don't have this function, so you may not agree to get into more than one car.

If you only drive back one car at a time, you can negotiate with the property management. If you have two cars parked in the community and change to driving at ordinary times, it is better to advise you to buy two parking spaces to avoid being unhappy in the future.

This problem must be divided into many aspects first. From the perspective of property law, if you buy a parking space, you have the property right to dispose of it. In this way, your requirements can be met, and you can get into as many cars as you want.

Analyze it from another angle. No matter how many cars you get into, you can only handle them in your parking space. Do you think you can park more than one car in your parking space?

On the other hand, the property manages everyone's public space area through the owners' convention. In other words, everyone should have a rule in public areas, not to say that you can stop if you want, or that everyone should stop if things go wrong, so we should abide by this owners' convention.

Think about it, if it is a parking space, only one car can be parked. It should be normal. Now, with the development of modern technology, parking spaces can accommodate multiple cars. Only one of these cars is allowed to enter this area. For a simple example, you have abc three cars. After a car enters this property area, bc can't get in. You can communicate with the property and see what kind of system the property used at that time. If this is the case, you can ask for more license plates.

Yours is not purely legal, so basically it depends on the owners' convention. Buying a house at hand can look at the owners' convention.

First of all, you bought a fixed parking space, not a license plate for parking. In other words, the ownership of this parking space belongs to you. As long as it is not flammable and explosive, the property has no right to interfere. So it's unreasonable.

Secondly, I can understand this behavior of the property. There is a simple reason. If you register two license plates, you can drive the car into the garage. If you only have one parking space, then the other will inevitably involve other parking spaces and passages. This is difficult to manage for the property. According to what you said, your underground garage should be strictly managed, with one car and one parking space, registered and opened, and people without parking spaces can't get in at all. The advantage of this garage is that there will never be foreign vehicles or other vehicles without parking spaces coming in to occupy parking spaces, but the disadvantage is that the management in many places may be too rigid and inflexible.

Third, I think you should think about how to do it according to your actual situation. For example, you only change cars occasionally, and the number and days are very few. I think you should understand the rigidity and strictness of the property, because what seems unreasonable is to better protect the interests of the owners themselves. If you let the car in casually, the parking space will be occupied and the owner will suffer. If I change trains frequently, I think I can go to the property management to discuss what to do. For example, a friend of mine has several cars in the company. He doesn't necessarily choose which car to drive on a certain day, or he often chooses which car to drive in different situations. If this is the case, you can consider discussing it with the property management and see what to do. A simple way is to sign a service contract after the property management allows it. Make sure you only park one car, and then the property will issue a card to you, or some systems can print the license plate, and you can get off and scan it before entering the garage, and then open the door. Some systems can't. In short, you can negotiate with the property according to the actual situation, so that you can have a little more trouble and consider the trouble of the property, and negotiate instead of creating contradictions. What the property is afraid of is nothing more than two cars in one parking space. You help them find a way to solve this concern, and naturally it will be easy.

We bought a parking space, and although we lost two license plates, we could only get into one car. As long as one car comes in, the door of the other car won't open. Isn't that great?

Why don't I give you ten eight license plates and record them all? Underground parking spaces are private, just like you. If you have two cars in the garage and only one parking space, then the other car will park in someone else's parking space, and other car owners will complain about the property. Do you think the property will be so stupid?

It is good that the brake release software can always control only one car, and two cars in one parking space cannot enter the community at the same time. But the software doesn't seem to work at present.

The parking space is purchased by the owner and the ownership belongs to the owner. The property is just a manager and has no right to interfere with what you park. Only entering the license plate number in the property is tantamount to depriving and restricting the owner's right to use the parking space. Of course, the property is illegal. The correct way should be that only one car can be parked in a parking space. As long as it is a car approved or authorized by the owner, the property can limit the number of cars parked from the management point of view, but it cannot limit the number of cars you have.

First of all, you bought a fixed parking space, not a license plate for parking. In other words, the ownership of this parking space belongs to you. As long as it is not flammable and explosive, the property has no right to interfere. So it's unreasonable.

Secondly, I can understand this behavior of the property. There is a simple reason. If you register two license plates, you can drive the car into the garage. If you only have one parking space, then the other will inevitably involve other parking spaces and passages. This is difficult to manage for the property. According to what you said, your underground garage should be strictly managed, with one car and one parking space, registered and opened, and people without parking spaces can't get in at all. The advantage of this garage is that there will never be foreign vehicles or other vehicles without parking spaces coming in to occupy parking spaces, but the disadvantage is that the management in many places may be too rigid and inflexible.

Third, I think you should think about how to do it according to your actual situation. For example, you only change cars occasionally, and the number and days are very few. I think you should understand the rigidity and strictness of the property, because what seems unreasonable is to better protect the interests of the owners themselves. If you let the car in casually, the parking space will be occupied and the owner will suffer. If I change trains frequently, I think I can go to the property management to discuss what to do. For example, a friend of mine has several cars in the company. He doesn't necessarily choose which car to drive on a certain day, or he often chooses which car to drive in different situations. If this is the case, you can consider discussing it with the property management and see what to do. A simple way is to sign a service contract after the property management allows it. Make sure you only park one car, and then the property will issue a card to you, or some systems can print the license plate, and you can get off and scan it before entering the garage, and then open the door. Some systems can't. In short, you can negotiate with the property according to the actual situation, so that you can have a little more trouble and consider the trouble of the property, and negotiate instead of creating contradictions. What the property is afraid of is nothing more than two cars in one parking space. You help them find a way to solve this concern, and naturally it will be easy.