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The street with no name still needs fibre, parcels, and garbage pickup

Infrastructure2 min read

A road can be busy, lived-in, and economically active while still missing the basic naming needed for service delivery systems.

The street with no name still needs fibre, parcels, and garbage pickup
Infrastructure - KodLokasi in the field

There are roads that everyone uses and nobody can name properly. Residents know them. Delivery systems do not. The same route that carries school traffic in the morning and parcel vans in the afternoon can still vanish the moment someone asks for a formal address. A driver can follow the road twice and still be unsure whether the house is before the junction or after the row of shophouses because the road itself has never been fixed into a usable reference. That becomes a problem the moment a utility crew, a waste truck, or a first-time visitor needs to arrive without a resident walking out to guide them.

Why unnamed streets create friction

Without a reliable reference: - parcel databases stay messy - utility appointments get missed - waste collection complaints are hard to verify - new visitors depend on live phone guidance

That friction shows up in small ways first. A technician arrives at the wrong entrance. A courier waits outside a house while the customer walks out to wave them in. A new resident spends ten minutes sending landmarks by text. The street works for the people who already live there, but every service call turns it into a puzzle. Attaching SBPP.0601.277 to a specific section of the road gives service teams a precise anchor point. That is often enough to turn a vague service area into an actionable destination. It also stops the same directions being repeated every time a new driver comes through.

Where to go next

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