What I discovered when I parked two Porsches in my garage
This photo was posted overseas and raises the question, "Are Porsche SUVs and Porsche 911s intentionally designed to look like this when parked next to each other?"
This is what I bought. ↓

That's true (lol).
It seems that many owners of a Porsche SUV (Cayenne/Macan) and a 911 who park the two cars next to each other in the same garage have had a similar experience (discovery?).
Even if you park a 911 next to a Cayenne/Macan, the SUV's back door will be opened without hitting the 911 next to it.
Of course, it's no good if it's too close, so it's no good if it's not parked in an exquisite location.

The shape of the Cayenne's rear door is this:

The shape of the Macan's rear doors is as follows:

And the shape of the 911's rear fender bulge looks like this:

Well, the reason is that the rear doors of the SUV are designed so that they don't hit the rear tires of the car, but by coincidence, the shape and height of the rear bulge of the Porsche 911 seems to match perfectly.
"Maybe this is designed to allow the doors to be opened wide so that children can easily get in and out of the back seat of the SUV even if the Cayenne/Macan and 911 are parked next to each other!!"
It seems that it is like that ^^
It's a bit rough, but roughly speaking, this is what's preventing it from hitting the target properly (maybe it's even harder to understand because the directions are different):

Of course, I don't think it was designed to prevent collisions, so it will still collide when it does, but I've also had the experience of accidentally opening the door at just the right distance in my garage.
"Wow! Amazing! It's designed so that there are no collisions!"
I think I would be so moved (lol).
