Tesla Cybertruck sales have dropped significantly in recent quarters, with unsold inventory building up rapidly. And it appears that the company is relying on unconventional storage sites for extra vehicles.
One such place per Detroit business is a Detroit shopping center, currently violating city codes to store dozens of cybertrucks and other unsold Teslas in parking lots.
Undoubtedly, the parking lot looks like a dystopian cemetery lined up in a row of shiny silver cybertrucks that take up spaces shoppers have come to visit the beds, buses and Trids that have now been closed. However, the wild wings of the shopping centre Buffalo are still open.
The lot is located near the new Tesla showroom in West Bloomfield, which may explain the overflow. Crane's report reports that shopping centre landlords have been informed of the violation, but enforcement may take some time.
Tesla's CyberTrucks are still selling other electric trucks, but they hope for CEO Elon Musk's success after eight recalls and devaluing the automaker's brand due to Musk's political involvement within a year.