Parking host guide for apartment buildings in Prague
An apartment building can contain unused parking capacity, but a shared courtyard is an operating environment, not an empty map pin. Before hosting, identify the legal authority, resident expectations, building rules, fire access, gate control, and the exact bay. The goal is useful supply that does not create a new conflict for people who live there.
Agree the boundary
Use the apartment-building permission guide and check house rules before publishing. Record whether a space belongs to a flat, cooperative, owner association, or shared area, and who can pause it when a move, repair, delivery, or resident need appears.
Communicate the real arrival
Describe the gate, bay marking, turning space, height, surface, lighting, walking route, and quiet hours. The neighbour-communication guide helps set expectations; the tenant-permission guide keeps access authority explicit. Never publish a permanent code or ask a driver to follow a resident through a locked gate.
Protect the building after publishing
Open only reliable hours, keep the calendar accurate, and define what happens when access fails. Use the host access-failure plan and the public host flow to make the first booking repeatable. The earnings calculator can model demand, but it cannot approve a shared space or replace building consent.
Test the handoff before launch
Ask someone who does not know the property to find the bay from the published instructions. Check the gate, turning movement, lighting, walking route, and the point where a driver can stop legally if access fails. Fix those details before sharing the page with residents or accepting a first booking.
Residential supply works when the driver gets a clear arrival and residents keep control of their shared home.
Before sharing, confirm that the building distinguishes visitor parking, deliveries, and fire access. A driver needs to know where to stop safely if the gate fails and whom to contact, but public copy should not reveal codes or detailed security routines. After the first bookings, review questions, late arrivals, and noise, then adjust the calendar and instructions with residents.