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table of contents |
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3rd
quarter 2009
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DBIA service contract spawns temporary facility in Ormond Beach

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The flexible bellows and intricate electronics and
hydraulics allow the passenger boarding bridges to
serve a variety of aircraft used at Daytona Beach
International Airport. |
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When
Ameribridge Services, an Indianapolis company, won a contract to
refurbish the passenger boarding bridges at Daytona Beach
International Airport (DBIA), it found a way to avoid the monumental
costs of shipping the bridges to and from Indy. It didn’t ship them.
Ameribridge offers turnkey services for the rehabilitation, repair,
modification, and sale of passenger boarding bridges.
“These
bridges are the walkways that connect the gates with the aircraft,”
said Steve Cooke, director of Air Service Development at DBIA. “They
are for the comfort and convenience of passengers and are used by
most types of commercial passenger jets. They allow passengers to
board without being exposed to the weather and they are controlled
with intricate systems and advanced hydraulics.”
Five of
DBIA’s six passenger boarding bridges are being refurbished. They
have been in service since the terminal opened in 1992. The schedule
takes only one bridge out of service at a time; work is being done
over eight months at a cost of $1.2 million. Refurbishment usually
can be accomplished at about 60 percent the cost of new equipment, a
significant savings in the current economic climate, Cooke said.
“Of
course, we were pleased to win the bid, but we always are looking at
ways to
control costs,” said Dustin Sloan, vice president and general
manager of Ameribridge. “To avoid shipping each bridge to our plant
in Indianapolis, we shopped around Volusia County and found a
facility at the Ormond Beach Airport Business Park where we could
perform the work locally. This saves time and money for us and for
Volusia County Government.”

City
of Ormond Beach Economic Development Director Joe Mannarino
stands before one section of a passenger boarding bridge
undergoing refurbishment by Ameribridge at its Ormond Beach
facility. |
The
company has leased an 18,500-squarefoot facility at the business
park and trucks
the units to and from DBIA. The company is part of the Five-Star
Airport Alliance, which includes several companies that provide
baggage handling system design, including 3-D laser scanning,
product manufacturing, software/controls implementation,
installation and maintenance of baggage handling systems, passenger
boarding bridges and ground support equipment. The Alliance includes
Ameribridge Services, Elite Line Services, G&T Conveyor Company, The
Horsley Company, Star Systems and ScanWorks. It serves airports and
airlines across the nation and internationally. The company also has
contracts with Miami International Airport —and Panama City-Bay
County International Airport.
Ameribridge officials said they are pleased to be able to establish
its temporary facility so close to DBIA. And Ormond Beach officials
are happy the project has landed in the city.
“Even
though this is a temporary establishment, it is great to have
another tenant at the Ormond Beach Airport Business Park,” said Joe
Mannarino, Ormond Beach director of Economic Development. “It adds
to the vitality of what is already a high productivity location and
it provides great testimony to the versatility of the park for other
companies that may be looking for an Ormond Beach location.”
Daytona
Beach International Airport is served by Delta Air Lines and US
Airways, both of which use the airport’s passenger boarding bridges.
The bridges also are available for any charter or scheduled air
carrier that needs to use the domestic passenger terminal.
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Department of Economic Development
700 Catalina Drive, Suite 200,
Daytona Beach, FL 32114
Telephone: 386-248-8048
FAX: 386 238-4761 Toll Free: 800-554-3801
Phil Ehlinger
Director
doed@volusia.org |