Wall-mounted mailboxes around us
Wall mount mailbox may be used in place of mail slots, these usually located close to the front door of the residence. Attached mail boxes are common in urban and older suburban neighbourhoods and in high-density neighbourhoods in North America. these are especially common in urban and suburban areas of Canada, where the curbside mailbox is rarely seen except in rural areas. An attached or wall-mount letterbox, with a hook underneath for newspapers. This mailbox is located in Calgary, Canada. Attached mailboxes are less common in newer developments and in smaller towns and cities where mail is distributed through a combination of post office boxes and community mail stations.
Rural and some suburban areas of North America may utilize curbside mailboxes. These receptacles generally consist of a large metal box mounted on a support designed primarily to receive large quantities of incoming mail, often with an attached flag to signal the presence of outgoing mail to the mail carrier. In the U.S. and Canada, rural curbside mailboxes may be found grouped together at property boundaries or road/driveway intersections, depending upon conditions. Although the USPS has general regulations stating the distance a letter box may be from the road surface, these requirements may be changed by the local postmaster according to local environment and road conditions. As of 2004, nearly 843,000 rural Canadian residents used curbside mailboxes for private mail delivery, though Canada Post has since announced plans to cut individual mail delivery services to rural residents. A number of postal services around the world are adopting neighborhood or community mail delivery, in which recipients retrieve their mail from an individual letterbox at a centralised or community mail delivery station located in their building or immediate neighbourhood.