Government Technology - October 2007 - (Page 46) e-government j j Synopsis: New York City welcomes the third fully automated garage to be built in the United States, signaling a shift in the industry. Possibilities state local federal Parking Jurisdictions: Hoboken, N.J.; New York City; Washington, D.C. Technologies: Automated garages. Contact: Ari Milstein, director of planning, Automotion Parking Systems, . New York City’s high-tech garage could breathe new life into the U.S. automated parking industry. F OCT_07 ebruary 2007 marked the third time in U.S. history that a fully automated garage opened its computerized doors to the paying public. New York City welcomed the garage as a complement to a retail and condo complex going up in Chinatown. Several years ago, it seemed America was on the verge of a parking makeover with the first fully automated garages making big entrances in Hoboken, N.J., and Washington, D.C., and many others slated to open in urban locales. But a spate of circumstances, including well publicized problems surrounding Hoboken’s garage, stringent government building codes, reluctant developers and an uncertain public, among other barriers, kept the garages overseas. However, the new garage, amid Manhattan’s bustling Chinatown, may change how deals are struck between the developers, owners and governments who build these types of facilities. “The problem with automated parking in the U.S. has been that most of the garages have been proposed on sort of a grand scale,” said John Van Horn, founder, editor and publisher of Parking Today magazine. “The fact is that in Europe and Asia, most of the garages or automated garages are relatively small.” At 125 feet by 75 feet, the Chinatown structure qualifies as compact. These new garages allow city developers and public officials to plan urban developments BY JESSICA WEIDLING | CONTRIBUTING WRITER more effectively, said Ari Milstein, director of planning for Automotion Parking Systems, the designer of the garage. Automotion is the U.S. subsidiary of Germany’s Stolzer Parkhaus, which has 32 facilities in 11 countries. Automotion-affiliated company American Development Group bought the Chinatown property in 2003 and charged Automotion, which offers high-tech parking solutions, with the design. MJS Garage Management was retained to run the garage. Automotion’s setup is ideal because its sister company developed the land and owns the site, Van Horn said, meaning it enjoys full access to the garage’s software and can hire its own maintenance crew. The 18,000-square-foot plot on narrow Baxter and Hester streets was once home to a 100-car, surface parking lot. Now the same footprint accommodates 24 condominiums, ground floor retail and a 67-vehicle underground automated garage — only 33 fewer cars than the former parking facility. Adoption Impediments Automated garages take up less space, reduce pollution — since cars don’t circle around the garage — and can be built without fire exits, pedestrian elevators, lighting, ventilation or ramps. Theft and other damages that often plague conventional garages are diminished because there’s no human interaction with the vehicles. Even with these incentives, private developers and municipalities in the United States hesitated to embrace automated garages, though their European and Asian counterparts have been using automated garages successfully for decades. One reason for widespread overseas adoption is that heavily populated cities in foreign countries have long been affected by land-use problems. “Europe and Japan have more constrained land uses, by and large. I think they confronted demand management strategies and congestion management strategies earlier than the United States did because they had the need for it,” said Susan Shaheen, Policy and Behavioral Research program leader for California’s Partners for Advanced Transit and Highways, at the University of California, Berkeley. Stateside adoption of the automated garages was slowed in part because of rigid U.S. building codes, which differ by region, and builders and architects attached to the old way of doing things. “They are completely uncomfortable in most jurisdictions with applying conventional garages’ building codes to this type of system because of its automated nature,” said Dale Denda, director of research at PMRC, a parking research company, explaining that local governments don’t know whether to classify automated garages as warehouse systems, conventional garages or neither. 46 http://www.govtech.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Government Technology - October 2007 Contents Point of View Big Picture The Last Mile GT Spectrum Letters How It Works Cerf on the Net Way Back Machine Separation Anxiety Let's Roll Rising to the Challenge Wednesday Afternoon Fever Parking Possibilities Products Signal: Noise Government Technology - October 2007 Government Technology - October 2007 - (Page CW1) Government Technology - October 2007 - (Page CW2) Government Technology - October 2007 - (Page CW3) Government Technology - October 2007 - (Page CW4) Government Technology - October 2007 - (Page 1) Government Technology - October 2007 - (Page 2) Government Technology - October 2007 - (Page 3) Government Technology - October 2007 - Contents (Page 4) Government Technology - October 2007 - Contents (Page 5) Government Technology - October 2007 - Contents (Page 6) Government Technology - October 2007 - Contents (Page 7) Government Technology - October 2007 - Point of View (Page 8) Government Technology - October 2007 - Point of View (Page 9) Government Technology - October 2007 - Big Picture (Page 10) Government Technology - October 2007 - Big Picture (Page 11) Government Technology - October 2007 - The Last Mile (Page 12) Government Technology - October 2007 - The Last Mile (Page 13) Government Technology - October 2007 - GT Spectrum (Page 14) Government Technology - October 2007 - GT Spectrum (Page 15) Government Technology - October 2007 - Letters (Page 16) Government Technology - October 2007 - Letters (Page 17) Government Technology - October 2007 - How It Works (Page 18) Government Technology - October 2007 - How It Works (Page 19) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 20) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 21) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 22) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 23) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 24) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 25) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 26) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 27) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 28) Government Technology - October 2007 - Cerf on the Net (Page 29) Government Technology - October 2007 - Way Back Machine (Page 30) Government Technology - October 2007 - Way Back Machine (Page 31) Government Technology - October 2007 - Separation Anxiety (Page 32) Government Technology - October 2007 - Separation Anxiety (Page 33) Government Technology - October 2007 - Separation Anxiety (Page 34) Government Technology - October 2007 - Separation Anxiety (Page 35) Government Technology - October 2007 - Separation Anxiety (Page 36) Government Technology - October 2007 - Separation Anxiety (Page 37) Government Technology - October 2007 - Let's Roll (Page 38) Government Technology - October 2007 - Let's Roll (Page 39) Government Technology - October 2007 - Rising to the Challenge (Page 40) Government Technology - October 2007 - Rising to the Challenge (Page 41) Government Technology - October 2007 - Wednesday Afternoon Fever (Page 42) Government Technology - October 2007 - Wednesday Afternoon Fever (Page 43) Government Technology - October 2007 - Wednesday Afternoon Fever (Page 44) Government Technology - October 2007 - Wednesday Afternoon Fever (Page 45) Government Technology - October 2007 - Parking Possibilities (Page 46) Government Technology - October 2007 - Parking Possibilities (Page 47) Government Technology - October 2007 - Products (Page 48) Government Technology - October 2007 - Products (Page 49) Government Technology - October 2007 - Signal: Noise (Page 50) Government Technology - October 2007 - Signal: Noise (Page 51) Government Technology - October 2007 - Signal: Noise (Page 52)
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