By Michelle V. Rafter
June 4, 2008—
Aspen Skiing Co. has purchased an integrated
RFID-enabled gate and point-of-sale (POS) resort management package from a new partnership between
Skidata, a provider of access gates for ski lifts, parking, amusement parks and other venues, and
RTP LLC, a Colorado resort software vendor, according to representatives at the companies.
Skidata, a Salzburg, Austria, subsidiary of Swiss-based
Kudelski Group, and RTP, located in Avon, Colorado, report that they have teamed up to make it easier for operators of U.S. ski hills such as Aspen, and other resorts, to tie RFID-based gates to POS systems in establishments' ticket booths, restaurants and equipment rental shops. Aspen Skiing eventually plans to install Skidata's hands-free RFID access gates at approximately 12 lifts on its four mountain resorts: Aspen, Aspen Mountain, Buttermilk and Snowmass. The company expects the first batch of the new gates to be operating at Aspen Mountain and Snowmass when the 2008-09 ski season begins next Thanksgiving, says Jeff Hanle, an Aspen Skiing Co. spokesman.
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Skidata's Freemotion Open gate model is designed for rapid detection of RFID lift tickets and activation of its single-arm turnstile.
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To prepare, Hanle says, Aspen intends to install RTP's point-of-sale resort management software in time for the resorts to open for limited summer activities on June 13. With Aspen's RFID system linked with its POS system, he notes, visitors will not only be able to move through lift lines faster, but eventually use a lift ticket or season pass to buy food, rent lockers or make other purchases throughout one of Aspen's resorts.
Previously, says Michael McDermott, RTP's senior VP of sales and marketing, U.S. ski resort owners had to buy gate equipment and resort management software separately, then integrate them through
middleware they either purchased from a third party or developed themselves. Under the terms of the partnership, RTP will resell Skidata equipment in the United States. The partners have not yet disclosed other terms of the agreement.
By making it a one-stop proposition, the partners hope to entice more U.S. ski resorts to adopt RFID technology. Although RFID gate systems are common in Europe, they're still the exception in North America, where about 12 of the continent's 600 ski areas have installed them to date, according to Skidata and RTP officials, as well as other industry sources. Skidata is also playing catch-up with
Axess North America, a subsidiary of Salzburg-based
Axess AG, a rival access gate manufacturer that has signed a number of U.S. resorts over the past several years. Both Skidata and Axess make lift gates using
high-frequency (HF) 13.56 MHz passive RFID tags complying with the
ISO 15693 standard.
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Michael McDermott
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The access gate manufacturers are courting resort owners eyeing RFID systems to replace older equipment, combat an ongoing ski industry labor shortage and provide customers with a better bang for their buck, sources say. Using RFID tags embedded in lift tickets or season passes allows an access gate to automatically confirm a ticket's authenticity and swing open to admit an authorized skier—or, in some cases, eliminates the need for a gate arm altogether.
What's more, by automatically verifying tickets, newer systems can reduce or eliminate the resort workers previously stationed at lift lines to scan bar-coded tickets or visually check if tickets were valid. According to resort officials, anything that saves on manpower is a positive at a time when stricter U.S. immigration standards and a shortage of affordable mountain-area housing are making it difficult to attract seasonal workers. And the less time customers wait in line for lifts, food and rentals, the more time they have for fun.