Wednesday, December 7, 2011

KDS (Kitchen Display Systems) at The Hamilton in Washington, DC

These are some pictures from a new restaurant/entertainment venue in DC named The Hamilton.  It's 950 seats and they are open 24X7 starting in late December 2011.
 There is nothing quite like a huge shiny kitchen with lots of technical toys.  The three expediter screens are 26" touch screens.  They look very tough and industrial.
 All mounting was done by a business partner of mine.   If you're interested in having him do your mounts/security/surveillance/phones/audio let me know.
 The mounts are all industrial-grade VESA 100.  Very tight and secure.
 There are 13 individual 19" prep KDS screens in two kitchens and a service bar, and 2 of the 26" screens for the expo stations.
 The beauty of KDS is that it cuts down on any verbal communication in the kitchen, with each prep person only seeing what they need to do.  There are circles at the top of each ticket that let every person in the kitchen who has items on that particular check see which other stations have items on the same check and allows them to coordinate silently on a table-by-table basis.
 Once each station is done with their part of any given check, they double-tap the ticket and it disappears from their screen.  The expediter sees the circles representing each station fill in as the check gets completed.
 Once all prep stations are completed, the ticket shoots to the upper left hand corner of the expediter screen and will have a blinking, perforated border, letting them know that that is the oldest complete check and any food in the window on that check belongs to that table.
 The operators of The Hamilton have put this to tremendous use in the Old Ebbitt Grill, which is actually in the same building.  The Old Ebbitt can run over 1000 covers a day, doing $25 Million+ on an annual basis, and have no food left over at the end of a rush because each person only makes what's on their screen.  It's helped them bring in an extra $1,000,000 a year in revenue due to speed increases.
 Another benefit of the KDS system is that every detail of every check/menu item/station is tracked from the second it is rung into the system until it is marked done by the expediter.  This means you can tell exactly how long each station is taking to get items done, how long each menu item is taking, how many times any station has hit alert levels, and where the bottlenecks are.  Silver Diner was able to increase their guest velocity by 28% during times they were one a wait by analyzing various aspects of these reports and adjusting their operations accordingly.  If you would like details, shoot me a message.
 This is a speed of service screen, or SOS as it's known in our vernacular.  This is also a 26" screen.  It shows a box for each table in the restaurant.  You can scroll to the right on the screen to see each floor.  Once a check is started on the table the square turns white.  Once a food item is rung in a small box appears in the square with a timer showing how long it's been cooking.  There are configurable alert levels set so that after a certain amount of time the square will turn yellow, alerting the kitchen staff and management that alert level 1 has been hit for that table, and then another alert timer will trigger alert 2, which turns it red.  Each alert reached is also indicated by an exclamation point in the box.  Once the order is marked as done at all prep stations and the expediter station the square turns blue, but the exclamation points remain, allowing managers to have visibility to the fact that the table did in fact reach alert one and/or two.  The box resets once the check is closed on the table.
You can also look at the detail of any check by double-tapping any square that is showing an open check.  In addition to that, any station can high-lite any menu item on their screen with a touch, then hit a media key which can bring up any information the restaurant would like to enter about that menu item including recipes or preparation instructions in text or video format.  It can cut down on training cost/time and increase the consistency of the items being produced.  It's much more than just a paperless kitchen.
For more chef-driven restaurants, we now have the ability for the chef to high-lite items on his screen and tell the prep stations to start working on them.  This is handy in tapas style as well as steak houses, where a chef may want the secondary stations to wait to prepare short prep-time items while a steak is being cooked.



All-in-all, a very high-tech operation using technology to it's advantage.  If you would like more information on the system and how I can help you use technology to make your restaurant more efficient and profitable please reach out.

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