Renato Berto, CAME Parkare and Vice President of CAME’s Parking Division. “Parking management is now an increasingly strategic component of mobility infrastructure and has a direct impact on people’s experience and airports’ operating efficiency”
Dosson di Casier (Treviso) – Mexico City 23.06.2026. With this summer’s major international football tournament bringing millions of visitors to Mexico, CAME is already playing a part in the country’s infrastructure response, with parking management solutions in place at 31 airports nationwide, including major hubs such as Cancún, Monterrey, Guadalajara and Tijuana. This widespread presence comes against a backdrop of strong growth in passenger numbers and now finds a new strategic expression in the project carried out at Aeropuerto Internacional de la Ciudad de México. Delivering 6,200 parking spaces at one of the world’s busiest airports, fully on schedule and without any disruption to service, was a complex challenge proving the reliability of CAME S.p.A., a global leader in access control, security and parking systems, with solutions designed to improve people’s lives and the work of professionals
“Major sporting events put infrastructure to the test and they demand systems capable of ensuring continuity, efficiency and adaptability in complex contexts.” said Renato Berto, CAME Parkare and Vice President of CAME’s Parking Division. “The project we carried out in Mexico City moves in exactly that direction, helping to improve passenger flow management at one of the world’s most important airports. Parking management is now an increasingly strategic component of mobility infrastructure: it is not just about organising spaces, but about having a direct impact on people’s experience and airports’ operating efficiency. CAME’s presence in 31 airports nationwide confirms a track record built over time, based on its ability to develop reliable, integrated solutions, that adapt to a wide range of highly complex scenarios. The intention is to make access and parking systems increasingly efficient, coordinated and ready to tackle challenges on an international scale.”
Launched at the end of May, the project involved three multi-storey car parks with a combined total of over 6,200 parking spaces, supported by an access infrastructure of 11 entry points and 22 exit points designed to ensure dynamic traffic flows and operating continuity. In a highly complex environment such as an airport, characterised by continuous traffic flow management, car parks are becoming an increasingly central factor in operating efficiency and service quality.
The Mexico City project falls within CAME’s strategy to develop integrated parking management solutions using CAME Parkare, the business unit dedicated to parking systems, with technologies designed to optimise traffic flows, simplify access and improve operating efficiency in the most complex environments. This project is part of the company’s ongoing consolidation path in the international airport sector. Among the most important projects is London’s Gatwick Airport, where CAME solutions manage eight car parks with approximately 40,000 parking spaces, ensuring continuity of service and integration with existing infrastructure. In Europe, Spain added a further confirmation, where CAME Parkare handled the technological upgrade of the car parks at Josep Tarradellas Barcelona–El Prat Airport, with a solution comprising 53 entry points, 60 exit points and 64 automatic payment stations for over 17,000 parking spaces.
More broadly, CAME Parkare manages 75% of Spanish airports, 25 hubs in total. On the strength of these results, CAME is looking to expand further within the airport sector, extending its offering to include pedestrian access control and high-security solutions, as part of an increasingly integrated approach to mobility.