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Titanic Quarter Case Study - Electro Automation Group Limited

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<strong>Titanic</strong> by name, <strong>Titanic</strong> by nature, Belfast’s <strong>Titanic</strong><br />

<strong>Quarter</strong> is one of the world’s largest urbanwaterfront<br />

regeneration projects measuring over<br />

185 acres on the site where RMS <strong>Titanic</strong> was designed<br />

and built.<br />

The <strong>Titanic</strong> Project in Belfast is one of Europe’s most ambitious visitor attraction schemes.<br />

Central to the needs of this busy area is the ability to deal with the large numbers of visitors<br />

who arrive in their cars and need somewhere to park. The <strong>Titanic</strong> <strong>Quarter</strong> is planned to eventually<br />

consist of seven separate car parks, each servicing the needs to the building it is attached<br />

to.<br />

When <strong>Titanic</strong> <strong>Quarter</strong> wanted an integrated site-wide parking control system, they undertook<br />

an intensive evaluation exercise. The result was they chose <strong>Electro</strong> <strong>Automation</strong>. Using<br />

world-renowned Swiss Zeag equipment, <strong>Electro</strong> <strong>Automation</strong> was able to meet or exceed the<br />

challenging performance specification that <strong>Titanic</strong> <strong>Quarter</strong> demanded. <strong>Titanic</strong> <strong>Quarter</strong> was<br />

able to achieve a solution that allowed site-wide control from a single point, one that would<br />

self manage public parking, tenant parking, contract parking, staff parking, deliveries and casual<br />

visitors. It also allowed <strong>Titanic</strong> <strong>Quarter</strong> the flexibility of independent, central or remote control<br />

within each car park and the fully autonomous modular design future proofed the system,<br />

allowing for infinite expansion on one or several sites.<br />

It was vital to <strong>Titanic</strong> <strong>Quarter</strong> that the car parking system they chose would allow the flexibility<br />

of unlimited expansion, and the transfer of central control to any one of the car parks to facilitate<br />

operations.

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