- sounds like good planning. it pricy for me to convert ss bay ( lots of concrete work for proper water draininge/safely feathering into existing concrete ,etc< since i have the ground, mite be cost effective to add a new iba bay >...anyway, just out of curiosity, how many of the 4 bays ended up as friction iba's?...and can u give any general info on the climate/ demographics of this owners customer base? the business model of 4 iba's : all at one site is new to me,,, thnx, kemp
This particular site had all four as
PDQ Laser 4000's. It was put in about 7-8 years ago. It is located in a small city in upstate New York - Elmira. The population of the area is about 29,000. There are two friction tunnels, one is only one mile away from this 4 bay.
I was surprised this guy did the expansion with the amount of IBA's around, but his numbers called for it.
The climate is a true 4 seasons. Summers that can reach 85-90 for hot spells, and winters with plenty of snow, salt and freezing temps. Every IBA in this town is a laser - major
PDQ distributor less than 2 hours away in Rochester, and there must be at least 4-5 other lasers in Elmira - combo of gas/c-store installs and professional car wash installs. Some of the c-store locations are severely neglected.
The area is saturated with IBA's. The tunnel guys have it good because they are the only 2 friction games in town, and with both manual prepping, and one towel drying as well, they offer a significantly better wash than the IBA's, for about the same price points. They are located in entirely different parts of town from each other.
Demographics are mixed - plenty of poverty, as in any city, but there is some professional/affluence as well. This location is on a rather major N-S route through the north part of the town. Can't comment on his traffic count, but it is good for the area. Median household income is around 40-45 grand per year.
Hope this helps.