There are 48 countries in Asia.
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My guess is that it makes it easier for drivers to detect bends in the road, as the stripes are painted at equal widths, so you can visually tell in your peripheral vision when the road is starting to slope a corner.
Generally, the color of the curb indicates where or not you can park a car there and for how much time. It may also indicate if it is reserved for a dedicated veihcile type.
http://guide.saferoutesinfo.org/dropoff_pickup/curb_striping_and_other_pavement_markings.cfm
Not 100% sure in the case of Singapore, but the double yellow lines indicate no stopping.
For places where we are allowed to park on the sides of the roads, there are either lot spaces already allocated and drawn out, or there will be no lines painted on the road.
Double yellow lines in the picture here indicates no stopping at all times, so it would be a little pointless to have the curb indicate no parking again.
The curb might just be for visibility, can't confirm.
Define Asian. I live in "Asia" and have never seen this.
Tl;dr can I park my van in front of this Singaporean prison and for how long until I attract attention?
In my country (Morocco)
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Red/white curbs: No parking, usually found in intersection where parking could block the view from other drivers.
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Straight continuous line by the curb: Not allowed to stop there (say for a quick errand)
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Straight or double continuous straight lines in the middle: Not allowed to do a "U" turn. Generally, Straight lines should not be crossed.
Interesting! In Cairo (probably all of egypt) it's the same, just different colors
I've skimmed through some Singapore's road guidelines and driver's handbook and didn't find any particular significance of kerb paining, from the context I inferred that striped kerb is painted that way just to be visually distinct, to be noticeable. Significant markings are made on the road alongside the kerb, like those two yellow stripes mean "no parking at all times".
You picked a picture of outside a prison...
It could just mean "no parking" and not be on every curb
I dunno...I'm pretty sure it's a Rison
Since at least some legitimate answers are already in, I will just say that I've noticed this as well from playing GeoGuessr, and it is definitely limited to only a few countries, I believe mostly in SEA.
Ahh yeah, good to know that I'm not the only one who noticed this
In Indonesia, they are painted black and white stripes like that to increase visibility. Heck, Jakarta used to paint them using colorful palette a while back, but recently went back to black and white. I personally prefer them to use colorful paints instead of just black and white, especially in urban areas where everything is grey already.
I saw something like that in Israel, it's like yellow lines in the UK, it tells you where you can park.
I feel like a quick web search could answer that, but I'm not going to do it either.
In US curbs where you can't park are painted bright yellow/orange, so I assume it's something like that.