What level is your curb?
Most American cities run their curbs on industrial-age tools — single rates, static signs, officer patrol. The cities that produce 2–3x more daily commerce per block aren’t spending more. They’ve graduated to a higher level on the Curb Productivity Scale. Take the 3-minute self-assessment. See what one level up is worth to your city. Find out how SpaceMaster gets you there.
There’s a Richter scale for earthquakes. A Bortle scale for night skies. A Kardashev scale for civilizations. There hasn’t been one for the curb.
Without a shared vocabulary, every conversation about curb technology becomes a feature checklist. Cities buy hardware that looks impressive and end up with results no one can compare. The Curb Productivity Scale gives cities a developmental arc: where you are today, where you could be, and what graduating to the next level is worth.
The scale defines five levels — Type 0 through Type IV — across six dimensions: Policy, Data availability, Wayfinding, Decision Point Info, Transaction ease, and Enforcement. Two design rules keep it honest. First, a city’s level is the minimum of its dimension scores — demand-responsive pricing without dynamic signage is a billing trick, not a level-up. Second, levels are observable from the curb — no points awarded for back-office systems that never reach the driver.
From Wild Curb to Adaptive Curb.
The criteria for each level are public, observable, and defensible. The level a city reaches is the level it can credibly defend across all four dimensions — not the highest level it has reached on any one of them.
Most US cities sit at Type I or Type II. The cities cited as exemplars — SFpark, LA Express Park, Seattle, Pittsburgh — lead the field on the Policy dimension with demand-responsive pricing on flagship corridors. Under the minimum-of-dimensions rule, even the exemplars operate at Type II overall — Type III policy on a Type II foundation. No city is at Type IV today, and arguably no city is fully at Type III either.
Three coherent stances. Only two of them honest.
Some cities sit at Type II by accident. Others sit at Type II by design — using simplified zone policies (Copenhagen-style 1-hour / 2-hour zones) and color-coded curbs to keep signage legible at the cost of differentiated policy. Both are coherent. The third stance — differentiated rules with the disclosure pulled away from the curb — is the trap.
1
Coherent — deliberate
Deliberate Type II
2
Incoherent — the trap
The third-option trap
3
Coherent — the level-up
Full Type III
A city slides from Stance 1 into Stance 2 the moment it adds differentiated policy elements without upgrading the decision-point layer. The strategic question is not "are you Type II?" — it’s "are you a deliberate Type II, an accidental third-option-trap Type II, or graduating to Type III?"
A strong tool with a hard temporal ceiling.
Red, yellow, green, white, blue paint conventions are parseable in the 1.5-second decision window. They lift Decision Point Info above bare signage — for categorical legality. They cannot encode time-of-day or day-of-week rules.
Color codes don’t go away in a Type III deployment. They get supplemented — species at the curb, current rules in the dynamic display.
What level is your city at?
Twelve questions, three minutes. Two questions per dimension across all six dimensions. Your overall level is the lowest of your six dimension scores — that’s the design rule. The result also identifies your weakest dimension, which is where the highest-leverage next investment lives.
The four-step framework lays out the sequence: set policy — communicate at the decision point — make compliance easy — enforce fairly. See the four-step framework on Curb Management »
What is moving up one level worth to your city?
Set your downtown size and your current level. The calculator shows the annual incremental commerce facilitated, sales tax recapture (at 7%), and approximate payback period for advancing one level. Numbers are illustrative, derived from the v1 CivicSmart parking-policy model and calibrated against published SFpark and LA Express Park results.
Annual impact for your city
Numbers are illustrative, models calibrated against parking data and published SFpark and LA Express Park results.
Want the long-form treatment? The Curb Productivity Scale is the subject of an eight-part weekly series.
Read the series on Resources →Where does your city sit on the scale?
Three minutes for the assessment. One conversation to map the level-up. With experience on the curb since 1936, CivicSmart has helped more cities than anyone else graduate the dimensions in the right order.