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The
new technology allows drivers to find a parking
space without having to drive through a garage.
Instead,
the car is left at an entry station and picked
up by a computerised lift that places it inside
the building on a shelving system.
Using
the high-tech facility will be free of charge
until the end of Ramadan, after which fees will
be “in line with the market rate”,
said Andrew Chambers, managing director of Asteco
Development Management.
“This
robotic car park will be especially convenient
for the office tenants, parking or retrieval
can be completed in less than 160 seconds,”
he said.
The
new robotic car park has a capacity of 765 vehicles
and is able to handle 250 cars per hours, which
makes it faster than any other parking system
in the world, according to its technology licensor,
Robotic Systems.
The
Ibn Battuta Gate development includes 40,000
sq m of office space and residential apartments
managed by Asteco Property Management, and a
five star hotel that is to be managed by Mövenpick
Hotels & Resorts.
The
new car park will primarily cater to the development’s
tenants, office workers and hotel guests, but
extra capacity means it will also be open to
the public.
The
growing number of high rise buildings in Dubai
means the amount of parking space available
in the city has become increasingly limited.
Robotic
parking typically utilises double the amount
of the space offered by a regular car park,
but the technology used also makes it more expensive
to build.
Robotic
Systems is currently developing another automated
car park in the Dubai International Financial
Centre (DIFC) with a capacity of 1,200 cars.
The project is currently between 70 and 80 percent
complete and will open in the second quarter
of next year, according to the company’s
general manager, Sami K. Issa.
“As
more and more vehicles in the UAE and the Middle
East share a limited volume of available space,
the need for a solution has become acute. In
our view, it is not simply more space but more
intelligent use of space which will solve the
parking problems of today and tomorrow,”
he said.
Parking
outside the Ibn Battuta shopping mall is currently
free of charge but owner Nakheel Retail is expected
to introduce parking fees on September 9 to
prevent metro users from leaving their cars
there.
“Ibn
Battuta Mall anticipates increased patronage
as a direct result of the new Metro line and
station,” the company told Arabian Business
in June this year.
“Parking
at the mall will continue to be managed in such
a way as to ensure that all shoppers and visitors
are provided with convenient and accessible
car parking facilities. We are also looking
at ways in which to best accommodate the needs
of Metro patrons who may wish to utilise the
Mall’s parking facilities.”
Two
of the city’s most popular shopping centres,
Deira City and Mall of the Emirates, have already
announced a parking system that allows shoppers
to park free of charge during the first three
hours of their visit on weekdays, and during
the first four hours at the weekend.
In
addition to the car park, phase one of the Ibn
Battuta Gate includes the project’s office
space.
Phase
two, which includes residential apartments and
a hotel, is expected to be complete within the
next four months.
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