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Concession Delivery System Washington Dulles International Airport. Background. Airports Authority built commissary in 1992 to house centralized delivery system Prior to Westfield Host was master operator (operating 50% of units)
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Concession Delivery SystemWashington Dulles International Airport
Background • Airports Authority built commissary in 1992 to house centralized delivery system • Prior to Westfield • Host was master operator (operating 50% of units) • Host ran the commissary and delivered to itself and other food and beverage tenants • Westfield awarded food and beverage contract April 2004 • Management contract only • Assumed responsibility for commissary operations
Operating Conditions • Multiple Operators • New contract created a number of owners, each with only 2 or 3 locations • Only food tenants used Commissary • Retailers received direct deliveries from FedEx and UPS • Not required to use the commissary system
Facility Constraints • Commissary • On airport, landside only • Only location with capacity to accommodate central deliveries • No Loading Docks • No freight elevators in Midfield concourse C/D • Pallet deliveries broken down at Commissary and placed on smaller carts, or • Unpacked on ramp at delivery points
Commissary Services • Deliveries at the Commissary • Broken down • Grouped for delivery by concourse • All food vendors required to participate • Only exceptions for highly perishable product, e.g., Dunkin Donuts. • Contractor costs passed directly to tenants • Based on utilization (number of cartons delivered) • No Westfield mark-up • Contract Cost: $700,000 per year, estimated
Challenges • Adds an extra layer of occupancy costs to tenants that they cannot directly control • Requires communication and coordination between commissary and tenants to ensure deliveries are promptly accepted and unpacked • Tenants must still bear the cost of having staff in place to accept and unpack the shipment
Lessons Learned • Planning concession sales and storage space is key to efficient deliveries and storage • Lack of loading docks or dedicated delivery spots, and lack of freight elevators, makes deliveries and unpacking more time consuming • increases the amount of time that food remains out of temperature controlled environment • Increases potential for ramp traffic conflict
Lessons Learned • Storage space needs to be large enough to accommodate and unpack deliveries. • Close coordination required between commissary and tenants to ensure properly acceptance and unpacking of deliveries • Documentation of delivery and acceptance is critical
Lessons Learned • Having a central commissary facilitates screening of product where deliveries arrive from street-side. • A commissary large enough to accept all product deliveries before distribution to individual locations will be critical to any implementation of 100% product screening.