Skip to main content

APT Skidata upgrades shopping centre parking

Parking specialist APT Skidata has returned to refresh and substantially upgrade the parking technology at Castle Quay Shopping Centre in Banbury, Oxfordshire, UK, more than twelve years after it originally installed the centre’s parking systems. Castle Quay has over eighty retail units and two visitor car parks, offering a total of 820 spaces to the 700,000 shoppers that park at the centre each year.
March 12, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
Parking specialist 1774 APT Skidata has returned to refresh and substantially upgrade the parking technology at Castle Quay Shopping Centre in Banbury, Oxfordshire, UK, more than twelve years after it originally installed the centre’s parking systems.

Castle Quay has over eighty retail units and two visitor car parks, offering a total of 820 spaces to the 700,000 shoppers that park at the centre each year.

In order to improve parking and make operating the car parks easier for the centre’s management team, APT Skidata installed four new entry and three new exit columns; updated the main computer system in the control room; and upgraded the Parking.Logic version 18 software platform to version 21.

The pay stations on site were essentially in good working order but now benefit from new coders allowing easy access and servicing for the car park team, according to Rozanne Ahier, asset account manager at APT Skidata: “The stations are modular in design so upgrades such as this are very effective and we expect a significant reduction in the number of incidents following the introduction of the new coders.

“In developing all of our parking system components,” says Rozanne, “we are looking to achieve improved reliability, simpler utility, and better value for money and that is exactly what the new coders will deliver to Castle Quay.”

The APT 460 coder unit features single-slot processing of tickets in varying formats and paper types, and with a double ticket feed the need to replenish ticket stocks is reduced by up to 50 per cent. The new system also enables Castle Quay to issue retailers with discounted parking season tickets on RFID cards.

Nick James, operations manager at Castle Quay Shopping Centre, says that the car parks are an essential part of the shopping centre’s offering: “It is very important to us that the car parks at Castle Quay remain open to customers every day of the year, and APT is careful to ensure that this is always the case – even whilst it is carrying out upgrade work.

“The recent upgrade programme of installations went smoothly with no major problems, thanks to APT’s planning, and the system is now noticeably more reliable and efficient to use and operate,” he continues. “Our parking systems has served us well for the past 12 years, and we now hope to remain trouble-free for many more years to come.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • US IntelliDrive cooperative infrastructure programme
    February 2, 2012
    The 'rebranding' of the US's Vehicle-Infrastructure Integration programme as IntelliDrive marks an effort to make the whole undertaking more accessible both in terms of nomenclature and technology. Shelley Row, director of the ITS Joint Program Office within USDOT's Research and Innovative Technology Administration, talks about the changes
  • ITS need not reinvent machine vision
    October 29, 2014
    Machine vision techniques hold the potential to solve a multitude of challenges facing the transportation sector Optical Character Recognition (OCR), the base technology for number plate recognition, has been in industrial use for more than three decades. It is a prime example of how, instead of having to start from scratch, the transportation sector can leverage and adapt the machine vision expertise already used in industry in order to provide robust solutions with new capabilities. “The real val
  • Standardise global ITS protocols to enable interoperability
    January 26, 2012
    ITS America has a new chief technology officer. ITS International caught up with Nu Rosenbohm at this year's World Congress to gather his thoughts on the main challenges at home and abroad
  • Here’s why WiM is value for money
    January 23, 2025
    Weigh in Motion systems are not new. What is new is their ability to collect more data and – importantly – more accurate data about axle loading and vehicle weight. Despite the obvious benefits, including safer highways and possibility of automated legal weight enforcement, obstacles remain for faster uptake. David Arminas reports on the manufacturers’ perspective…