
Projects
Shopping Centers
The Gateway
There are two garages, "Winter" and "Summer," named after the two seasonal Olympics divisions, dividing 2,300 spaces. (One surface lot, just north of the Gateway, handles some overflow - about 470 spaces.) Garage levels are color-coded and named after appropriate Olympic venues, i.e., skiing, swimming, etc., to help people remember and locate their vehicles quickly. Visitors can take a color-coded card from card holders located at elevator and stairwell sites that match the signage of the level where they park.
There are 20 lanes: At the north surface lot, there is one dedicated in, one dedicated out, and one reversible; at one entrance of the Winter garage, there are four entrance lanes (capability of being three exit lanes and a reversible lane); and three lanes at the other Winter Garage plaza (two entrance, one exit which can be reversible - and one which was an exit but is unused at present). Across the street, there are four lanes for the Summer garage: one dedicated entrance, two dedicated exits and a reversible, one dedicated entrance and one dedicated exit at 100 South, and further down (at the 200 South - the street address), visitors find two entrance and two exit lanes, none reversible.
Equipment selection was a critical. They chose Amano McGann AGP Series equipment including 13 validators, 13 fee computers, 15 ticket dispensers, 13 lag time readers, and a host of fee signs, printers, displays and card scanners. For facility management software, they chose Amano McGann Software Systems.
The Gateway's biggest challenge came during a 17-day period at the onset of the Olympics. Because of the nature of the games they anticipated people arriving gradually, but departing all at once.
Other related projects:
Circle Center Mall
Cambridge Galleria
Midwest Plaza