i wouldn't use the one spot with the zoom. one spots work GREAT with "analog" pedals, provided there are no ground loops, or charge pumps in the stuff connected to them.
you may wanna run the analog pedals with the one spot, and the zooms with the power supplies designed for them, but i doubt it will help. on the zooms (or in their documentation) it will state that due to fcc regulations, they have to accept noise and may produce it as well. not being shielded is absolutlely part of it, but mostly it's the crud that digital pedals dump into the power supplies...all the "noise" gets sent to ground, which of course means it gets sent to everything else connected.
i'd reccomend putting the noise suppressor before the zoom pedal so the noise reduction can filter out crap getting put into the zoom and amplified (as well as not gating off your reverbs and delays and stuff) and either run the zooms with their own PSU's, or, even better, (especially for less noise) with batteries. that will take care of most of your noise issues right there. sucks, but like most things of this nature, a certain amount of compromise is inevitable.
another trick you could try that helps sometimes is to use 2 conductor plus shield "microphone" cable between the pedals...hook up one conductor to tip, and one to sleeve on each plug, but connect the shield/braid to ONLY ONE SIDE. that way you can "float" the shielding between the pedals...one way will be quieter than the other. it's different with each pedal i've used this with, but you can get quite a bit of noise reduction by doing this...noticeable, probably 3-4 db quieter. ideally, you want the "shield" to only connect to "earth/ground" on one side...generally the shielded end would go to the amp, the unshielded to the last effect in the line's output.. and so on down the line. in practice tho, sometimes reversing the polarity can help nuke noise, much like a second coil bucking hum.
it's not perfect...but hey, any port in a storm, right?
can also try putting a small cap to ground from the hot inside the plugs on the cables. it may make it worse tho.
a buffer between the offending boxes also may help a little...
but for quietest operation, and i know it's a drag, batteries rule.
i have a whammy pedal i dearly love, but i can't use it live cuz it won't play nicely with my analog boxes, and i use them a lot more than i do the whammy. it's just the nature of the beast, sadly...those digital multis are intended pretty much to be standalone. once ya add other pedals, all bets are off.
is there an effects loop in your amp? if so, try patcing a cable into it, and see if the "whine" diminishes. if it does, get some plastic safe contact cleaner, and with the amp off, spray a quick blast into the send and return jacks, and repeatedly plug a plug into each jack. sometimes the contact of the switching jacks commonly used can oxidize and make a crummy contact, and lead to squeals and noise, too.. good luck!!
