ALSANCAK COASTAL CORRIDOR – DELIVERY DOUBLE-STOP BEFORE WEEKEND SURGE
Along the Alsancak Coastal Corridor, commercial frontage intensifies toward the weekend. Restaurants, cafés, and small retail units prepare for increased evening activity. The adjustment begins before customers arrive.
The delivery phase creates the exposure.
Time pattern: Fridays 15:30–18:30. Secondary pattern: Saturdays 11:00–14:00.
During these windows, supply vehicles enter the corridor in short waves. Vans stop briefly in front of restaurants, beverage distributors unload near café clusters, and service vehicles pause at retail units along the strip. These stops are rarely long enough to justify full parking repositioning.
Instead, double-stopping occurs.
A common sequence unfolds westbound along the Alsancak axis:
Vehicle A continues at stabilized corridor speed.
Ahead, a delivery van occupies part of the active lane while unloading.
Vehicle B, already slowing to bypass the van, shifts slightly left.
Simultaneously, an eastbound vehicle approaches within narrow commercial alignment.
The corridor compresses laterally.
Unlike weekday retail stops, delivery timing clusters. Multiple short obstructions can occur within 150 to 300 meters. Drivers encountering one obstruction accelerate again, only to meet another shortly ahead.
This creates brake wave formation.
Historically, when Alsancak frontage density was lower, weekend preparation required fewer clustered stops. As hospitality and retail activity expanded through the 2010s and into the 2020s, pre-event logistics intensified without structural lay-by expansion.
The road geometry remains linear and visually open. The operational function becomes temporarily fragmented.
Evening light conditions intensify the effect during winter months. Low sun angles westbound reduce contrast around partially obstructing vehicles. Reflective commercial signage competes visually with hazard lights on delivery vans.
The structural seam is clear:
Pre-weekend preparation
Short-duration double-stops
Sequential lateral shifts
Opposing flow proximity
The exposure is not caused by illegal parking alone. It is generated by clustered obstruction frequency during predictable time bands.
Before the weekend surge, Alsancak Coastal Corridor transitions from steady flow to staged activation. Each brief stop narrows the usable envelope of the road.
The van remains for minutes.
The compression effect persists for seconds.