CCTV

Education white paper

by Mark Rowe

Security within education establishments is a necessity, writes Dahua Technology.

Long viewed as a ‘grudge buy’, especially in smaller institutions. Something that you have to have. A necessary evil. As a result, many schools and universities have spent only what they have to, looking for the bare minimum, and in some instances even using CCTV kits meant for small retail or domestic use. This is a mindset that has changed over recent years with many sites, particularly larger campuses, adopting proper security and surveillance practices. However, it does still prevail in many. Also, added to this, education funding has never been tighter, with some schools looking hard at how they’ll pay the bills, let alone cover the cost of what must seem like a luxury.

However, there is a flipside to this, with growing pressure to protect both students and staff from a myriad of dangers, including abuse, accidents and even – at the extreme end of the scale – arson. As a result, this raises the question of how schools and universities can afford a system fit for purpose while keeping costs to a minimum. This is an area Dahua and the wider industry have been looking at, recognising the balancing act involved. There are a few things that can be done.

Infrastructure

This is often an overlooked cost in new and upgraded systems. As with all electronic equipment, the main components tend to be a known quantity. We have in mind an idea of how much a new TV or sound-bar will be, but how often do you factor in the specialist connectors or fibre optic cables to plug it all together? This is always the bit you grab at the last minute and pushes you well over your original budget. Now, imagine that expensive specialist cable isn’t 2 metres long, but 200 metres long. Also that it has to run through ceiling ducts, between buildings and through playgrounds!

At a stroke your £400 camera has had £50 of cable and £150 of labour added to it. Multiply this by 30 cameras and all of a sudden you’re looking at the need to reduce camera numbers or look for other ways to cut costs.

To help alleviate this, the industry has now developed special adaptors, allowing newer technology cameras to use either older existing infrastructure, or to run over existing IP networks. Do you have a long distance to cover or need to go between buildings? Simple Wi-Fi point-to-point senders are now a lower cost, fast-fit alternative to groundworks and can also be used for your other network devices.

Coverage

Sites such as large schools and universities tend to cover large areas, with some extending to several acres. This can make the number of cameras needed to provide a usable view of all relevant areas unfeasible. To help address this, there have been three main developments.

Traditional analogue cameras typically produced around 480 TV lines of picture quality, which was approximately comparable to VGA resolution. With the advent of IP and analogue replacement technologies, such as HD-CVI, camera image qualities have become exponentially better, with 12MP becoming a norm. This means a single camera can now monitor far larger areas than traditional cameras ever could. There are football stadiums in the UK that use this technology to watch several thousand people simultaneously using a single fixed camera providing the ability to zoom in digitally and recognise each individual.

Multi-lens

A relatively new innovation, this is a single device, but with multiple cameras built in. These can operate in a couple of ways: by giving multiple camera feeds over a single connection, or having all of the images ‘stitched’ together giving full 180 degree or 360 degree fields of view.

This technology offers a number of cost-saving benefits. First, installing one camera rather than three or four in the same area saves significant installation time and infrastructure. Second, on a recording device these days you tend to pay for the number of recording channels, and many multi-lens devices will often only require one channel of recording. Third, is the cost of the unit itself. Because it sometimes replaces the need for four or more cameras, a single camera doesn’t carry the cost a larger number of cameras otherwise would.

Thermal imaging

Although not a new technology, thermal imaging used to be something that was far beyond the budget of a traditional CCTV system. Added to this is the physical size of the units; before now, it was relatively unheard of for this technology to be used outside military or petrochemical sites. This is something that has changed in the past few years, with some thermal cameras now at a similar price to a traditional camera. Also, the size of a thermal imaging camera has reduced significantly, meaning it is also no bigger than a conventional system.

The benefit of this technology is coverage. A thermal camera can detect movement and pick out intruders over huge distances. At night, these cameras come into their own, watching fence lines and open spaces such as playing fields, with a single camera able to monitor several hundred metres. Now, for less than the cost of a PTZ, you can monitor entire playing fields, even in the pitch black.

One topic that has been in the news a lot recently is AI. This is an innovation that is still in its infancy, but the electronic security market is leading the way and AI is already in use. Adopted quickly by councils, police and used on larger systems, AI has many benefits and provides a fast return on investment.

AI embedded in CCTV can carry out multiple functions, from recognising individual faces, to monitoring flow, dwell times and even detecting behaviour patterns that help identify potential problems before they happen. This becomes a huge step forward in larger systems that traditionally need human monitoring. The cost of two or more people monitoring a system 24/7 can easily run into six figures each year. Having a self-monitoring system that can not only do this itself, but across many applications, such as watching out for known individuals, makes it significantly more efficient and able to monitor hundreds of cameras simultaneously.

This is a system that is now live and running in town centres, including in the city of Lincoln, demonstrating its ability to pay for itself in a matter of weeks.

Related News

  • CCTV

    Low light network camera

    by Mark Rowe

    Canon Europe has launched the ME20F-SHN, a low light network camera, pictured. As a sister product to the ME20F-SH, the ME20F-SHN which…

  • CCTV

    Bosch PTZ

    by Mark Rowe

    New from Bosch Security Systems, the AUTODOME 7000 family of pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) cameras. The company’s embedded Intelligent Video Analysis (IVA) software automatically…

  • CCTV

    DVR draw

    by msecadm4921

    During IFSEC 2012 Genie CCTV Ltd ran a daily prize draw to win a four-channel Aver Nano Hybrid DVR. Aver’s Nano Series…

Newsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to stay on top of security news and events.

© 2024 Professional Security Magazine. All rights reserved.

Website by MSEC Marketing