![Image](http://www.lund.co.uk/images/20141212_144359%20%28Small%29.jpg)
Maybe there were some special circumstances, but surely, in retrospect, this space could have been better used. Would it not have been nicer for it to be landscaped in some way, and from an environmental point of view, not concreted over, so that surface water would not run off? I passed by in the evening, to see it it filled up when people came back from work, but hardly:
![Image](http://www.lund.co.uk/images/20141212_182043%20%28Small%29.jpg)
and I also looked for a satellite image on Google Maps
![Image](http://content.screencast.com/users/TimLundSE26/folders/Jing/media/48f39a43-06d9-4c1a-9a5b-a0ff89f05ebd/2014-12-12_1903.png)
My guess is that this level of parking provision would have been required by parking standards at the time, but that they are out of date according to the evidence here. The satellite image suggests that there are also guidelines for disabled parking - which developers would be reluctant to try arguing down, since this would not look good. With that tree cover, it would never have been that easy to maintain a particularly attractive garden, so, without being able to fit in more housing units, parking spaces would probably have been most attractive economically for the developers.
Still, it seems a shame. Are parking standards coming down fast enough? How much other space is needlessly lost to concrete round here?