I was watching the work going on in preparation for his Majesty's arrival this morning, and noticed the kerbs around the central reservation were being re-painted black and white. As I drove back towards the centre, I noticed similar central reservation markings in many (not all) places.
What does this mean please?
I've always worked on the black and white kerb markings meaning I can park legally, but that would be ludicrous in the outside lane of a dual carriageway ....................... or would it? TIT.
No, these markings are fairly widespread, not just in special areas. I guess that I've never noticed them because I've never considered parking in the outside lane of a dual carriageway.
What it's telling me, with over 40 views, is I'm not the only one driving on Thailand's roads without knowing.
In the Thai version of things to know for the driving test (link to a pdf file) it just states the black and white markings are for visibility and on a bridge they also mean no stopping or parking.
Thanks for the link hhinner. That confuses things even more:
black.png (58.42 KiB) Viewed 875 times
This is what I was talking about, and have always been under the misapprehension (along with most of the population of Thailand, I believe) that it was legal to stop here. Aren't we stupid?
Its just as well the BIB are under the same misapprehension.
Yes, I think it's legal to stop and park here, at the side of the road, but not on a bridge, or at a central traffic divider. I've looked, but never seen anywhere with a better explanation. The PDF file also has explanations for the red/white (no stopping or parking) and yellow/white (loading/unloading and drop off/pick up allowed, but no unattended parking). Maybe it's whatever the traffic cop says it is?