20 feet
25 feet 2405.2 d No person shall stand or park a motor vehicle within 25 feet of the approach side of any "stop" or "yield" sign located at the side of the roadway.
State laws may vary, but you should not park within 15 feet of any intersection regardless of whether or not there is a signal. Cars need to be able to maneuver the intersection, and if you are parked within 15 feet, you will be blocking necessary traffic lanes.
You cannot stop or park within 15 feet of a fire hydrant. You can receive a ticket if you park too close to a hydrant.
500 feet
There are several parks within Melbourne's Central Business Disrict: Fitzroy Park, Flagstaff Park, Treasury Gardens and Birrarung Marr Park.
I'm quite sure there is no emergency vehicle anywhere within which you can travel 300 feet.
There are a few documented archaeological sites just outside the Park's boundaries. The sites within the Park appear to be hunting camps. The lack of settlement sites within the Park is attributed to its high elevation with scarce resources. Documented groups within the park area in the last 500 years include the Koyukon, Tanana and Dena'ina people.
There isn't any. If there were, then the intersection would consist of all the numbers that are both rational and irrational, and there aren't any of those.
Smoking is prohibited within 50 feet of explosive-laden vehicles to ensure safety and prevent any accidental ignition of flammable materials.
The time it takes to cross a typical intersection depends on walking speed. An average walking speed is about 3 to 4 miles per hour, which translates to approximately 4 to 5.9 feet per second. To cross a 30-foot-wide intersection, it would take roughly 5 to 7.5 seconds. However, this can vary based on individual walking speed and any traffic signals.
Yes a intersection is any place where one line of traffic meets another. Another place where an intersection can occur is with lines in parking lots as well as on roadways.
50 Feet