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市场调查报告书
商品编码
1909953
欧洲和美国路边管理成长机会(2025-2030 年)Growth Opportunities for Curbside Management in Europe and the United States, 2025-2030 |
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由于智慧城市数位化和永续交通目标的推进,路边管理正在不断发展。
本报告分析了路边管理市场的转型。报告深入探讨了市场演变、各种系统类型、当前趋势、主要企业以及重塑城市交通的生态系统。颠覆性技术、创新经营模式和全球大趋势持续影响路边市场,有望提高效率、改善安全性并优化空间利用,从根本上改变城市、营运商和车队管理路边通道的方式。本报告分析了城市和技术供应商为何加速整合数位化路边解决方案,以及路边通道货币化和优化新模式的出现。这些模式包括动态定价、订阅服务、整合物流以及智慧装卸区和路边充电基础设施的整合,所有这些都旨在利用人工智慧、自动化和即时数据系统的强大功能。本研究对美国和欧洲的主要地区进行了深入分析。在每个地区,报告都检验了影响数位化路边策略采用的法规结构、技术应用和政策重点,以及实际的试验计画和城市主导的主导。本报告旨在探讨智慧路缘管理如何重塑城市交通生态系统,识别相关的创新和竞争优势机会,并重点介绍与数据标准、互通性、执法以及所有参与者之间的相关人员相关者协调相关的挑战。
摘要:路边管理市场
在美国和欧洲,路边交通管制市场正经历快速转型,其驱动力包括数位化、永续性、货运拥塞、微出行发展以及不断变化的城市出行需求。城市正从传统的人工执法系统过渡到由即时数据、自动化和标准化路边执法支援的全数数位化生态系统。这项变革使市政当局能够改善需求管理、减少双排停车、优化货运装载、实现执法自动化并提升出行公平性。
主要发现
现代路边管理市场反映了城市对路边认知和管理方式的根本转变。曾经只是停车的实体边界,如今已成为连接货运、客运、微出行、公共交通服务以及新兴自动驾驶技术的动态介面。电子商务的兴起、最后一公里配送的普及、共享出行需求的成长以及向永续出行方式的转变,都大大提升了对结构化、数据驱动型路边管治的需求。
传统的道路通行系统依赖静态标誌、柔软性的时限和人工执法,无法应对现代城市复杂多变的道路通行状况。双排停车、繁忙街道拥塞、不安全的装卸作业以及低效率的周转率等问题普遍存在。城市也面临改善道路通行便利性、保障行人安全、确保货运作业符合环保和多模态政策的压力。
在这种环境下,数位化路缘库存管理正成为下一代路缘管理的核心。透过将实体资产和地方法规转换为机器可读格式,旅游服务、车队和城市系统可以对其进行解读。这使得城市能够即时了解路缘区域的分配和使用情况。与支援法规数位化(例如 CurbLR 和 APDS)、动态定价工具和出行资料馈送(例如 MDS)的平台集成,可实现公共和私人营运商之间的无缝协作。
人工智慧赋能的执法正变得日益重要。许多城市面临人员短缺、执法覆盖范围不均以及依赖人工开罚单等挑战。配备视觉侦测系统和车牌辨识功能的执法工具可以自动侦测违规行为、记录拦截情况、采集车牌讯息,并即时启动开罚单流程。这些系统能够显着提高执法遵从度,减少人力投入,并促进交通法规的公平执行。
智慧装卸区是停车和路边管理市场的关键成长领域。这些区域利用感测器、电子许可证、行动预订和时限执法,实现对货运通道的即时管理。城市受益于非法装卸的减少、货运周转率的提高以及路边营运绩效指标的改善。货运车辆则获得了可预测的装卸通道,从而减少了停留时间和营运效率低下的问题。
动态停车管理和自适应定价策略使城市能够根据拥塞情况、活动时间、车辆类型和环境限制来调整路边停车需求。透过将路边分析与数位支付系统集成,市政当局可以调整价格,从而提高周转率、减少停车位巡逻,并推广其他出行方式。
欧洲城市正透过永续性政策领先政策创新。低排放区、都市区车辆通行规定、多模态道路设计以及电动出行一体化等倡议,在路边停车位分配和合规执法方面发挥着至关重要的作用。数位化路边系统在这些政策的实施中扮演关键角色,确保货运车辆、共享汽车和私家车遵守排放限制和路边使用规则。
在美国,联邦政府投入大规模资金支持先进智慧路缘系统的部署。公私合营正在加速该系统的普及,技术提供者以收益共用模式推出系统。这些合作提高了部署的柔软性,并降低了市政当局的前期成本。
这些趋势共同作用,将路缘转变为智慧、柔软性、能够创造收益并提升安全性的城市资产。随着城市不断扩展其数位化基础设施,路缘石管理市场将继续朝着自动化、即时数据智慧、与自动驾驶车辆整合以及货运、客运和微出行流量优化等方向发展。
本分析重点在于美国和欧洲路缘管理的现代化及其与不断发展的城市交通生态系统的融合,涵盖塑造路缘管理市场的技术框架、营运策略、政策趋势和服务模式。
目标区域
不适用
该范围确保了对与停车和路缘管理市场相关的营运和技术进步的明确关注。
收入预测(仅限定性分析):路边管理市场
A. 透过申请
B. 透过技术
C. 由最终用户
1. 最终交付和都市区货运交通的快速成长
激增的货物运输量给路边卸货供给能力带来了巨大压力。智慧卸货区、货物预约和基于感测器的监控正在透过提高周转率和减少违规停车来推动路边管理市场的发展。
2. 城市管治的数位转型
城市正在将路边执法数位化,从基于标誌的规则转向结构化的即时数位框架,从而实现自动化和互通性。
3. 欧洲的永续性指令
低排放区 (LEZ)、城市环境监管区 (UVAR)、永续交通计画 (SUMP)、永续物流计画 (SULP) 和欧盟绿色交易等倡议正在推动路边法规的製定和数位化执法工具的支持,使路边区域成为减少排放的战略资产。
4. 联邦资金与公私合营
SMART津贴和市政公私合营正在加速数位路边技术的部署,而无需城市进行大量资本投资。
5. 叫车公司与微出行的发展
共乘和微型出行方式的日益普及加剧了路边停车需求,需要动态分配和严格执法。
6. 自动化和人工智慧执行
人工智慧视觉、车牌识别系统和自动开票工具可减少人工工作量,并显着提高合规性。
1. 道路交通法规片段化与政策不一致
美国各城市缺乏统一的路缘标准,减缓了供应商的扩张速度,也使停车和路缘管理市场的推广变得更加复杂。
2. 隐私和GDPR法规
欧洲严格的隐私法禁止某些执法手段,这使得人工智慧摄影机的推广应用变得复杂。
3. 预算限制
儘管有强烈的需求,但中小城市往往难以资金筹措数位化路缘升级。
4. 基础设施陈旧,数据品质差
许多城市缺乏最新的路缘法规数位化地图,需要耗费大量时间转换。
5. 技术整合挑战
将新的数位路缘系统与现有的停车计时器、许可证系统、TNC API 和现有的 GIS 框架整合起来非常复杂。
6. 政治和地区反弹
新的收费系统、加强执法或重新分配停车区域可能会引起当地企业和居民的强烈反对。
竞争格局:路边管理市场
市场上有各种各样的技术供应商,专门从事路边数位化、人工智慧执法、货物区自动化、动态停车和城市交通分析。
主要参与企业有:
这些公司包括 Automotus、Populus、CurbIQ、Modii、INRIX、Passport、FlexCurb、Parkunload、Coding the Curbs、SenSen、Stantec、Ubiwhere、Hayden AI、Siemens Mobility、Videalert 和 Jenoptik。
各公司提供的能力如下:
Curbside Management is Evolving through Smart City Digitization and Sustainable Mobility Targets
This report analyzes the transformation of the curbside management market. It delves into the market's evolution, various system types, the current landscape, leading players, and the ecosystem reshaping urban mobility. Disruptive technologies, innovative business models, and global megatrends continue to impact the curbside market, promising enhanced efficiency, improved safety, and optimized space utilization, fundamentally altering the way cities, operators, and fleets manage curb use. The report explores why cities and technology providers are increasingly integrating digital curbside solutions and how new models are emerging to monetize and optimize curb access. These models include dynamic pricing, subscription services, integrated logistics, and the convergence of smart loading zones with curbside charging infrastructure, all designed to leverage the capabilities of AI, automation, and real-time data systems. The study offers deep-dive analyses of the primary regions in the United States and Europe. For each region, it examines the regulatory frameworks, technological adoption, and policy priorities influencing the deployment of digital curbside strategies, alongside real-world pilot programs and city-led initiatives. This report aims to answer how smart curbside management is reshaping urban transportation ecosystems, identifying the associated opportunities for innovation and competitive advantage, as well as the challenges related to data standards, interoperability, enforcement, and stakeholder alignment for all participants.
Report Summary: Curbside Management Market
The Curbside Management Market across the United States and Europe is undergoing rapid transformation driven by digitalization, sustainability mandates, freight congestion, micromobility growth, and evolving urban mobility needs. Cities are transitioning from traditional, manually regulated curbside systems to fully digitized ecosystems supported by real-time data, automation, and standardized curb regulations. This shift is enabling municipalities to better manage demand, reduce double-parking, optimize freight loading, automate enforcement, and enhance mobility equity.
Key Insights
The modern Curbside Management Market reflects a structural shift in how cities view and manage the curb. What was once a simple physical boundary for parking is now a dynamic interface connecting freight, passengers, micro-mobility, transit services, and emerging autonomous mobility technologies. The rise of eCommerce, last-mile delivery, increased rideshare demand, and a shift toward sustainable mobility have dramatically escalated the need for structured, data-driven curbside governance.
Traditional curb systems-anchored in static signage, inflexible time restrictions, and manual enforcement-cannot accommodate the complex and fluctuating curb activity in today's cities. Double-parking, congestion around busy commercial districts, unsafe loading behaviors, and inefficient turnover represent widespread challenges. Municipalities are also under pressure to improve curb accessibility, protect pedestrian safety, and ensure that freight operations align with environmental and multimodal policies.
In this environment, digital curb inventories have emerged as the backbone of next-generation curbside management. These inventories convert physical assets and local ordinances into machine-readable formats that mobility services, fleets, and city systems can interpret. They provide cities with a real-time understanding of how curb segments are allocated and used. When integrated with platforms that support rule digitization (e.g., CurbLR and APDS), dynamic pricing tools, and mobility data feeds (such as MDS), they enable seamless coordination between public agencies and private operators.
AI-powered enforcement is becoming increasingly important. Many cities struggle with limited staffing, inconsistent enforcement coverage, and reliance on manual citation processes. Vision-based detection systems and LPR-equipped enforcement tools automate violation detection, record stopping behaviors, capture plate information, and initiate citation workflows instantly. Such systems significantly improve compliance, reduce human labor requirements, and facilitate equitable application of mobility rules.
Smart loading zones represent a major growth pillar within the Parking and Curbside Management market. These zones use sensors, digital permits, mobile reservations, and time-window enforcement to manage freight access in real time. Cities benefit from reduced illegal loading, improved freight turnover, and better curb performance metrics. Freight fleets gain predictability in loading access, reducing dwell time and operational inefficiencies.
Dynamic parking and adaptive pricing strategies allow cities to shape curb demand based on congestion, event timing, vehicle type, or environmental constraints. Through digital payment systems and integrated curb analytics, municipalities can adjust pricing to encourage turnover, reduce cruising for parking, and promote alternative mobility modes.
European cities are leading policy innovation through sustainability mandates. The emphasis on low-emission zones, urban vehicle access regulations, multimodal street design, and electric mobility integration places enormous importance on curbside allocation and compliance enforcement. Digital curb systems play a vital role in implementing these policies, ensuring that freight, rideshare vehicles, and private cars comply with emissions restrictions and curb usage rules.
In the United States, large-scale federal funding supports advanced smart curb deployments. Public-private partnerships accelerate adoption, as technology providers deploy systems with shared revenue models. These collaborations increase deployment flexibility and reduce upfront costs for cities.
Together, these forces are transforming the curb into a smart, flexible, revenue-generating, and safety-enhancing urban asset. As cities expand their digital infrastructure, the Curbside Management Market will continue evolving toward automation, real-time data intelligence, integration with autonomous fleets, and optimization across freight, passenger, and micromobility flows.
This analysis focuses on the modernization of curbside operations and their integration with evolving urban mobility ecosystems in the United States and Europe. It covers the technology frameworks, operational strategies, policy trends, and service models shaping the Curbside Management Market.
In-Scope Areas
Out of Scope
This scope ensures a clear focus on operational and technological advancements relevant to the Parking and Curbside Management market.
Revenue Forecast (Qualitative Only): Curbside Management Market
A. By Application
B. By Technology
C. By End User
1. Last-Mile Delivery & Urban Freight Surge
Escalating delivery volumes put extreme pressure on curb supply. Smart loading zones, freight reservations, and sensor-based monitoring improve turnover and reduce double-parking, propelling the Curbside Management Market.
2. Digital Transformation of Urban Governance
Cities are digitizing curb regulations and replacing sign-based rules with structured, real-time digital frameworks enabling automation and interoperability.
3. Sustainability Mandates in Europe
LEZs, UVARs, SUMPs, SULPs, and EU Green Deal initiatives drive curbside regulation and support digital enforcement tools. Curb zones are now strategic assets for reducing emissions.
4. Federal Funding & Public-Private Partnerships
SMART Grants and municipal PPPs accelerate deployment of digital curb technologies without heavy city CapEx.
5. Growth of TNCs & Micromobility
Increasing ride-hailing and micromobility usage intensifies curb demand, necessitating dynamic allocation and active enforcement.
6. Automation & AI Enforcement
AI vision, LPR systems, and automated citation tools reduce manual workload and significantly improve compliance.
1. Fragmented Curb Regulations & Policy Inconsistency
Lack of uniform curb standards across US cities slows vendor scaling and complicates deployments in the Parking and Curbside Management market.
2. Privacy & GDPR Restrictions
Europe enforces strict privacy laws prohibiting certain enforcement modalities, complicating AI-camera deployments.
3. Limited Budget Availability
Smaller and mid-sized cities often struggle to fund digital curb upgrades despite strong need.
4. Legacy Infrastructure & Poor Data Quality
Many cities lack updated curb regulations or digitized maps, requiring time-consuming conversion.
5. Technology Integration Challenges
Integrating new digital curb systems with legacy parking meters, permitting systems, TNC APIs, and existing GIS frameworks is complex.
6. Political & Community Pushback
New pricing rules, increased enforcement, or reallocated curb zones sometimes generate resistance from local businesses and residents.
Competitive Landscape: Curbside Management Market
The market includes diverse technology providers specializing in curb digitization, AI enforcement, freight zone automation, dynamic parking, and urban mobility analytics.
Key participants include:
Automotus, Populus, CurbIQ, Modii, INRIX, Passport, FlexCurb, Parkunload, Coding the Curbs, SenSen, Stantec, Ubiwhere, Hayden AI, Siemens Mobility, Videalert, Jenoptik, among others.
Their capabilities span: