Subject Metrics today introduced CurbSight™, a municipal-intelligence capability that converts sanitation vehicles, inspection fleets, street sweepers, and other routine public vehicles into persistent neighborhood-awareness infrastructure.
Cities already drive every street.
CurbSight simply gives that movement a second, quieter purpose.
Using vehicle-mounted imaging and Subject Metrics’ civic classification models, CurbSight identifies visible property conditions, route-level changes, recurring vehicle presence, unauthorized objects, inconsistent landscaping, structural indicators, and other conditions potentially requiring additional municipal context.
“Public agencies should not have to choose between collecting the trash and understanding the people producing it,” said Owen Tress, General Manager of Municipal Intelligence. “CurbSight allows cities to do both through infrastructure residents already recognize.”
Familiar vehicles, expanded context
CurbSight observations can be associated with parcel records, permit history, prior complaints, vehicle sightings, code-enforcement activity, and existing SubjectGraph profiles.
Authorized departments may configure findings for:
- Advisory review
- Enforcement-ready review
- Historical accumulation
- Cross-departmental enrichment
- Future relevance
No new fixed-camera network is required, and residents do not need to install an application, create an account, or modify their normal behavior.
Human-reviewed classification
CurbSight does not issue citations automatically.
The platform identifies potential conditions, assigns confidence, and presents findings to an authorized municipal employee positioned close enough to make the final decision.
An observation is not a violation.
It is an opportunity to begin looking for one.
CurbSight is available immediately to participating municipal customers through the Subject Metrics Civic Intelligence Platform.