Skip to main content

WPS installs Parkadvance at Cascades Shopping Centre in Portsmouth city centre

WPS has installed its pay-on-Foot parking technology, Parkadvance, at Cascades Shopping Centre in Portsmouth city centre. It is designed with the intention of enhancing customer experience, and to use an IP-based system that could be more easily updated to incorporate new functionality as and when it becomes available and required.
November 21, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
WPS has installed its pay-on-Foot parking technology, Parkadvance, at Cascades Shopping Centre in Portsmouth city centre. It is designed with the intention of enhancing customer experience, and to use an IP-based system that could be more easily updated to incorporate new functionality as and when it becomes available and required.


The system accommodates multiple payment options including contactless, chip and pin and cash, and is set up to include card-in/card-out and online pre-paid functionality when timing is appropriate for the shopping centre.

ParkAdvance's reporting functionality provides access to information on the car park’s performance, usage patterns and turnover.

Andrew Philip, Centre Manager at Cascades Shopping Centre, said: “Parking is no longer considered a simple provision, but rather the first vital touch point in the customer journey, and as such it is our responsibility to ensure it is a positive experience. We therefore decided to take the parking provision in-house and see where enhancements could be made.

Issues around lost tickets was one area where Andrew was keen to improve the overall experience: “Previously lost tickets incurred a flat day-rate charge because it was not possible to verify when the customer had entered the car park,” Andrew says. “The ParkAdvance system, however, incorporates ANPR, meaning we are usually able to verify when the customer arrived and solve lost ticket situations efficiently, and to a greater customer satisfaction.”

Related Content

  • Amsterdam reaps the reward of digitised parking
    April 20, 2016
    Amsterdam had taken the final step in digitising parking and parking enforcement and the move is paying dividends. It was almost a decade ago that the City of Amsterdam decided to start the evolution - or maybe even a revolution – of its parking enforcement: it got rid of the paper parking permit or ticket behind the windscreen and introduced the digital parking right. It was the first step on a bumpy but successful road to digitization, resulting in a fore running position in on street parking enforcement.
  • Jenoptik supplies sophisticated multi-section control project
    November 17, 2014
    Efficient speed enforcement in the most highly frequented tunnel in Austria on the A7 near Linz. The Bindermichl-Niedernhart tunnel complex on Austrian highway A7 connects the major east/west A1 route from Vienna/ Bratislava to Munich/Salzburg with the A7/ E55 running south from Prague in the Czech Republic. This happens right in the middle of the city of Linz, Austria.
  • Changing roles in data collection for traffic management
    January 23, 2012
    Transport for Greater Manchester's David Hytch discusses the evolving roles of the public and private sector in managing and disseminating data. Data services for traffic management were once the sole preserve of public sector organisations, they being uniquely placed and equipped for the work involved. Now, though, this is changing. There is even a presumption in some countries that the private sector will take a greater, if not actually a lead, role in the provision of information for transport management
  • Home based real time travel information drives reduction in car use
    January 20, 2012
    David Crawford investigates a new approach to discouraging car use - the 'kitchen as travel centre'. ITS technology working together with UK planning legislation is driving an innovative 'kitchen as travel centre' approach to home design which is boosting public transport as an alternative to car use. The combination is already proving powerful enough to assuage environmentalist opposition to major urban developments. It is also being seen as a way of delivering wider social and community benefits inside an