Week 1 — The Curb Is the Storefront
The most productive piece of real estate any American city owns isn’t a building. It’s a 22-foot rectangle of pavement next to the curb. Every parking space along a commercial block sits at the front door of an economic activity — a storefront, a restaurant, a service, a residence. Its value is measured not in rent, because cities mostly don’t charge it, but in turnovers — the count of customers who park, transact, and leave so the next customer can park.
Run the rough math on a midsized downtown of 5,000 managed curb spaces. At a representative six turnovers a day with $30 of adjacent commerce per turnover, that’s roughly $200 million a year in commerce flowing through the curb — separate from whatever the meter itself collects. Multiply by the city’s sales-tax rate and the curb is also delivering $10–15 million a year to the general fund, in receipts that no one labels as “parking revenue.”
Now run the same math when one of those turnovers fails to happen — the customer couldn’t find a space, took a non-compliant space and got ticketed and never returned, or simply went to a strip-mall private lot instead. One missed turnover per space per day is a $30-million-a-year hole in commerce. Two missed turnovers is $60 million. Most American downtowns are running closer to the second number than the first, and almost none of them measure it.
The curb is the storefront. Almost everywhere in North America, the storefront is underperforming.
Over the next eleven weeks, we’ll work through why. We’ll walk the geometry of the parking decision at 20 mph; the legibility math of regulatory signs; the heuristics drivers actually use; the manufactured-violation cycle that costs cities more than they earn from it; the math of the recoverable opportunity; the role of on-curb hardware as an information signal; the buzzword critique that’s done real damage to the industry; the trade-offs cities face and the third option to avoid; the four-step framework that recovers the value; the on-curb display design we think actually works; and the synthesis question to ask before any procurement decision.
The bones of the problem are geometric and the fix sequences itself once you see the geometry clearly. Stick with us.
Next week: why the sign that regulates an open space is, in the typical case, already behind the driver by the time they can see the space.
Continue the series
12 parts · ~72–84 min total
The most productive piece of real estate any American city owns isn’t a building. It’s a 22-foot rectangle of pavement next to the curb. Every parking space along a commercial block sits at…
Picture an average driver cruising at 20 mph through a downtown corridor — about 30 feet per second. They’re scanning for parking. Three numbers determine the outcome.
Read week 2 →A common response to last week’s argument is: “Well, the sign is right there at the corner — drivers should pay attention as they enter the block.” This argument doesn’t survive contact…
Read week 3 →So what do drivers actually do? Empirical observation of drivers searching for parking shows that they don’t read regulatory signs proactively. They can’t, and they don’t try.
Read week 4 →The empty decision window isn’t a passive problem. It’s the input to a feedback loop:
Read week 5 →Take a representative midsized downtown with 5,000 managed curb spaces. The exact figures vary, but a working baseline:
Read week 6 →The single-space curbside meter performs two functions, only one of which is payment. The other is indication — the meter at a space tells the driver, at a distance and in motion, that the…
Read week 7 →For roughly a decade, parking-industry vocabulary has converged on a set of appealing words: asset-light, no-hardware, frictionless, free the curb of clutter. The reasoning has been that…
Read week 8 →There are two coherent ways to manage curb space. Either one can work well.
Read week 9 →Curb improvements need to happen in a specific sequence. Each step depends on the one before it. Skip a step and the framework collapses.
Read week 10 →A working on-curb display needs to satisfy four design constraints simultaneously. The constraints come from the geometry of the parking decision (covered in weeks 2–4), and any product…
Read week 11 →When a curb-management change is proposed — a new vendor, a new payment scheme, a new enforcement model, a new technology — there’s one question worth asking before any other:
Read week 12 →