Week 7 — The Meter at the Curb Is the Signal
This week: what specific intervention actually moves the needle.
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 space is a legal parking space. Removing meters in favor of pay-by-app or pay-by-plate systems removes the indication function as well, even when payment continues to work.
This is the function that most “asset-light” curb deployments have lost without realizing they lost anything. The replacement signage — a sign at the corner, a kiosk mid-block — does not perform the same job. A sign at the corner conveys rules to a driver who is already standing on the sidewalk, not to a driver evaluating a space at 20 mph from 60 feet away. The two contexts have nothing in common as cognitive tasks.
A meter at the space is the only piece of the parking system that addresses a driver in motion at the moment of decision. Take it away and you’ve left the driver with:
- The presence of other parked cars (a heuristic that fails when the rule changes).
- Memory of city norms (works for residents, fails for visitors).
- A sign at the corner they passed 100 feet ago.
None of these closes the empty decision window.
The right design is on-curb hardware that performs both functions: indicates legality from a distance (the post itself, visible from 100+ feet, is the first signal), and discloses the rule at the moment of decision (a screen or display at the space, legible in motion). Modern transflective LCDs at 3 feet above curb height, oriented toward approaching traffic, are readable from 50 feet in daylight. That puts the rule in front of the driver during the 2–3 second commit window — which is the only time it matters.
Payment is a separate task and a downstream task. It can flow through the same hardware (tap, card, app) or different hardware (an LPR-driven app-based system). What payment cannot do is replace the indication function. They are different jobs.
The industry’s mistake over the last decade has been treating “no curbside hardware” as a feature rather than a regression. It’s a regression. The hardware was doing more work than the procurement spec acknowledged. Removing it saved a line on a capex sheet and cost orders of magnitude more in lost commerce on a different sheet. The math came out the wrong way every time. The framing — “asset-light,” “freeing the curb,” “frictionless” — let cities make the bad trade without seeing what they were giving up.
Next week: a closer look at the buzzwords themselves and the harm they’ve done.
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…
Read week 1 →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…
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 →