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How to Keep Your Building and Property Safe

by Chinnu

If someone breaks into your building, land, or assets, physical security covers what you can do to keep them safe. You need to protect three areas when you’re planning a physical security program: the outside, the inside, and the inside area.

 Your physical security system will probably work well if you can add two or three types of security to each level.

Outer Perimeter Security

The lines on your property describe the outside edge of your land. Your goal in protecting the outside edge is to decide who can walk or drive onto your land. An armed guard stands guard at the gate of a barbed wire fence, which is one of the strictest kinds of perimeter security.

Sometimes, a simple fence may be enough. When choosing what kind of perimeter security to put in place, you should compare the cost of the different options with the chance that someone will break in.

Territorial Reinforcement and Natural Access Control are two security ideas that are used in border security.

Natural Access Control

When they enter and leave a place, criminals like to feel like they are in charge. Because they think they can move around without being seen, they don’t see much risk when they are in charge. Visitors can be kept in a certain area, though, by clearly marking and limiting the ways people can get to buildings and properties.

Territorial Reinforcement

The purpose of it is to make it clear what land is public and what is private so that people can’t get in without permission.

Intruders, on the other hand, will have a hard time fitting in. Peripheral security and territorial reinforcement are two different things, but they both have the same goal: to keep people from getting on your land.

Inner Perimeter Safety

Your building’s walls, windows, and entrances make up its inner perimeter. The use of locks, keys, and alarm systems is common practice when it comes to protecting your inner perimeter. As its name suggests, locks and keys serve to deter would-be burglars.

To manage who can enter your inner perimeter, an electronic access control system is a great tool to have. Last but not least, in the event of a perimeter breach, the alarm system will sound an alert.

 Make sure you keep hold of your keys as you design the perimeter security system. You have a major security hole if someone else can copy your keys without your awareness.

Interior Safety

The last stage of security is interior security, which covers the inside of your building(s). You can keep an eye on what’s going on inside your business with security cameras, and they can also record proof of crimes for later investigation.

Movement monitors can help you keep your building safe by letting you know when security guards, volunteer floor marshals, or intruders are in the area. You can also install school safety accordion doors or electronic entry control systems to manage the flow of people inside your building and keep people who aren’t supposed to be there from getting into restricted areas.

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