Skip to main content

Robotic parking project for Atlantic City

Boomerang Systems, a designer and manufacturer of automated robotic parking and self-storage systems, has been contracted to supply 249 parking spaces utilising its RoboticValet parking system in the Metropolitan Project in Atlantic City,
March 15, 2012 Read time: 1 min

3875 Boomerang Systems, a designer and manufacturer of automated robotic parking and self-storage systems, has been contracted to supply 249 parking spaces utilising its RoboticValet parking system in the Metropolitan Project in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The Metropolitan is a state of the art residential tower that will rise to nearly 400 feet with spectacular panoramic views of the Atlantic Ocean. The project contains 124 residential units and approximately 5,000 square feet of retail space opening directly onto the Boardwalk, next to the new Revel Casino.

Chip Pressman, head of development for 3919 Lazocean, the developer, was recently quoted as stating he chose the Boomerang RoboticValet System due to its simplicity and reliability. "When you initially think of robotic parking you think of complicated and strange things. But when you see Boomerang's System operate you realise it is really very simple."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Responsive roadsign developed by student
    August 22, 2013
    A UK student hopes his new lenticular road signs which ‘pulse’ at drivers will lead to a revolution in the way motorists are given information on the roads. Meanwhile, a leading road marking firm is helping keep tourists safe in a spiritually significant town in Umbria, Italy. Guy Woodford reports You may think Charles Gale’s vision of creating the first ‘pulsing’ lenticular road sign was the result of months, even years, spent studying traffic and driver behaviour on the roads of his adopted student c
  • Tough competition in concrete paving market
    February 13, 2012
    One thing is clear in the concrete slipforming sector. This comparatively niche market for equipment is rapidly becoming a good deal more competitive as key manufacturers jostle for position.
  • Solving congestion in Brisbane
    August 2, 2012
    Rapid growth in a major Australian city in recent years has created new problems for the infrastructure and especially transport Expansion in the city of Brisbane, the Queensland state capital and the third largest city in the country, is set to continue and some 1,500 people arrive/week from within Australia and from other parts of the world. At this rate by 2026 the city's population should increase by 1.4 million: at present it is 1.8 million. To cope, the Queensland government and city council have ini
  • Parking problems in Bristol
    August 21, 2015
    It seems that people will park in the smallest of places, despite the efforts of urban street designers and town planners to ensure an orderly arrangement of suitably spaced cars. The advent of smaller-than-small cars has meant that drivers will park in smaller-and-smaller spaces. Surely some spaces are just too small to attract drivers of even the smallest car. But the city of Bristol, in southwest England, has taken no chances and has painted the double-yellow ‘no parking’ lines in areas where no one in t