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commercial buildings. Our line of turnstiles, gates and optical
monitoring products are used by thousands of government and private
facilities throughout the world.
During
the past decade, Alvarado has also developed an innovative line
of hardware and software solutions for the leisure and entertainment
industries. Focusing primarily in the areas of access control,
queuing and the computerized counting of people and vehicles.
Alvarado's products are the recognized standard for this fast
growing marketplace.
INSTALLATIONS
Alvarado
has installed security hardware in perimeter controlled environments
for a wide range of organizations in the U.S. and abroad, including
the FBI, DEA, federal reserve banks, boards of trade, oil refineries,
aerospace manufacturers, nuclear facilities, embassies and state
department locations throughout the world. In addition to these
highly regarded installations, our client list also includes a
number of other very recognizable names that rely on us for help
with access control, queuing and counting millions of patrons
every year.
In
addition to security applications, Alvarado has also provided
state-of-the-art solutions for numerous leisure and entertainment
venues, including Jacobs Field, home of baseball's Cleveland Indians.
Other entertainment facilities that have chosen Alvarado equipment
include Denver's Invesco Field, Pittsburgh's PNC Park and Phoenix's
Bank One Ballpark. These stadiums use Alvarado's EDC turnstiles
and controllers for online entry validation via barcode ticket
scanning.
Six
Flags theme parks also rely on Alvarado hardware and software
for facility access control, plus patron and vehicle counting.
Our turnstiles, optical counting lanes, patron access consoles
(PAC's), GateLink and GateWatch software have been integrated
with existing POS systems.
We've
also installed our Supervisor optical counting turnstiles and
GateWatch counting software at a number of large riverboat casinos.
The counting accuracy and reliability of this system has been
tested and approved by four state gaming commissions, as well
as an independent gaming testing laboratory.
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