Skip to main content

Scheidt & Bachmann reveals parking portal

Scheidt & Bachmann has created an online parking portal for parking operators to offer to long-term, or contract, parking customers. The system allows customers to select one or more car parks and set up a contract for reservations. This can be on a permanent or Monday to Friday basis. Once a car park has been chosen, the user registers and is sent an RFID tag by the car park operator. Parking costs are deducted automatically from the customer’s account each month.
March 26, 2014 Read time: 1 min
3961 Scheidt & Bachmann has created an online parking portal for parking operators to offer to long-term, or contract, parking customers.

The system allows customers to select one or more car parks and set up a contract for reservations. This can be on a permanent or Monday to Friday basis.

Once a car park has been chosen, the user registers and is sent an RFID tag by the car park operator. Parking costs are deducted automatically from the customer’s account each month.

Scheidt and Bachmann sales manager Salvador Rios says that, while competitors have similar systems, only Scheidt & Bachmann’s allows the selection of multiple car parks.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Samba time for Travelier and Moovit in Brazil
    May 9, 2025
    Bus ticket purchases in app now available through domestic brand DeÔnibus
  • Tollers make way as NextNav muscles into 902-928MHz spectrum
    July 30, 2013
    Toll operators and Progeny trade claim and counter claim about the potential ramifications of operating in the 902-928MHz spectrum, as Jon Masters finds out. Two months after the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) determined that Progeny can start commercial operation of its NextNav location finding service, the dust has begun to settle. The tolling industry has had a chance to reflect on how this may impact its operations, in the knowledge that NextNav will share the 902-928MHz frequency band with RFI
  • Contactless payments introduced on London's buses
    December 14, 2012
    Bus passengers in London can now use their use their contactless debit, credit or charge card to touch in on the yellow Oyster card readers and pay the single Oyster fare on any of London's 8,500 buses. Introducing the scheme, Transport for London (TfL) says the new payment option will also be good news for the approximately 36,000 people per day who board a bus and find they have insufficient pay as you go balance on their Oyster to pay for their journey as they will be able to use the other card they may
  • China's RFID market value forecast to reach US$4.3 billion by 2025
    May 26, 2015
    According to a new report by IDTechEx, RFID in China 2015-2025, not only will the use of RFID in China become a US$4.3 billion market in 2025, but that figure will almost double if the value of tags and readers made in the country and exported elsewhere is included. Already in 2015 China had 85 per cent of the global manufacture capacity of RFID tags, with over 150 RFID companies operating in the country.