Indoor Positioning Tech Enhances Campus Security with 3D View
- By Sydny Shepard
- April 01, 2019
Texas A&M University-San
Antonio (A&M-SA) is a rapidly
expanding campus, with
residential facilities and on campus
businesses. With the
ever-present risks of crises and emergency
situations on university campuses, the A&MSA
Police Department began looking for
ways to increase efficiency when it came to
campus security. They landed on a advanced
technology solution that has never before
implemented on a campus: indoor positioning
technology.
From the start of last semester, the police
department at A&M-SA began using the
indoor positioning technology, which
worked through the use of Bluetooth beacons
installed throughout the campus’ buildings
and open spaces.
The technology is used to help pinpoint
emergencies so that police can respond in a
timely manner, eliminating unnecessary
incidents. Instead of receiving an alert about
a disturbance in the student union building,
the A&M-SA police are now given specifics
on a potential incident and its location, such
as, “on the fourth floor, west wing, outside
room 410.”
“With indoor positioning and SafeZone,
we’re able to provide a faster response time,
whether it is a medical emergency or an
active shooter,” says Roger Stearns, A&MSA’s
assistant chief of police.
A Broader Solution
A&M-SA is not alone in adopting the system
from CriticalArc. A number of universities
in the U.S. and overseas have recently gone
down the same route, but A&M-SA is the
first university to deploy it campus-wide
instead of targeting it at specific, higher risk
locations.
This indoor positioning capability is one
feature of a much broader solution, CriticalArc’s
SafeZone, which includes functions for
geo-fencing, targeted direct communications
with individual users, groups in multiple
locations, lone worker tracking and protection,
emergency management tools and situational
awareness capability. In short, the
system has the sort of control-room functionality
usually only associated with more
complex Physical Security Information Management
(PSIM) systems.
Older style safety systems can give users
geographic positioning system (GPS) coordinates,
but for any building with more than
a single floor this only offers a limited view.
By contrast, CriticalArc’s new generation
three-dimensional capability is adding a whole new level of functionality.
There is a big difference between seeing
activity on your site approximated as a flat,
two-dimensional graphic than seeing it accurately
realized in 3D, and that has many people
interested. At A&M-SA, Stearns says there
are multiple benefits to using the SafeZone
system. It enables his officers to pinpoint precisely
where any problem is occurring. It helps
officers deliver a more targeted response,
more quickly and whatever the incident.
“We no longer have to check multiple
floors to make sure that we were in the right
location if were responding to an incident,”
Stearns said.
Interestingly, Stearns does not discount
using traditional fixed help points—they can
be important for visitors who are new to a
location or who don’t have a phone with
them, but indoor positioning has major
advantages, he says.
The most important being that, for relatively
low cost, ‘help point’ style protection
and care can now be extended across all
areas of the campus. When an individual
triggers a call for assistance using the system’s
app on their phone, officers in the control
room can see exactly where that person
is, right down to which floor they are on and
which room they are in.
They can communicate with that individual
directly, and silently if necessary, and
they can share information, alerts and warnings
with other individuals and groups in
specific locations across the campus. The
police department’s new ability to visualize
with total accuracy is transforming the way
his officers work.
“The moment the system went live it was
as if the police communications center could
accurately view the campus for the first
time,” Stearns said. “We live in a 3D world,
and suddenly this system was giving us a 3D
view of it.”
Installation
Setting up the new system was straightforward
enough, taking just four days during
the 2018 summer break. Jason Goodrich,
Customer Success Manager at CriticalArc
explains the process.
“Indoor positioning is enabled through a
series of Bluetooth beacons,” Goodrich said.
“These beacons are wireless—with lithium
batteries giving a minimum five years’ operation—
so there’s practically no disruption.”
On average, one beacon is needed for
every 1,000 square feet, assuming that it’s a
relatively open area with not too many obstacles.
For higher accuracy, or where the signal
path is obstructed (concrete structures and
shelves full of books can both affect it) beacons
are placed closer together.
For 3D building coverage, dedicated beacons
are simply installed on each floor.
“Typically, we’d expect to complete a
three- or four-story building in one day,”
Goodrich said. “We design an initial layout
based on the building plans. It’s then easy for
the installing team to test the system for signal
strength and to make modifications on
site as the job progresses.”
Although A&M-SA is the first university
to have opted for total site coverage, including
all buildings and external areas, others
have deployed it for specific locations such as
laboratories and libraries – choosing these
because students and staff frequently work
alone there out of hours or, in the case of
laboratories, because its where higher risk
activities are sometimes undertaken.
Efficiency and Accuracy
With users in over 80 countries says
Goodrich, SafeZone is helping global police
and security teams reduce criminality, deal
with medical emergencies and improve customer
service day-to-day.
In two recently reported cases affecting
students travelling overseas, it has helped to
provide life-saving support; one case during
a terrorist attack (Strasbourg, France) and in
another during a dangerous flood (southern
India). In these and similar incidents the
university control rooms hundreds or even
thousands of miles away, have been able to
extend protection by ‘geo-fencing’ the affected
area and treating it almost as an extension
of their campus, at least in terms of communication
and advice.
Away from the headlines, indoor positioning—
and the wider SafeZone system—is
letting team managers analyze officer activity
patterns and coordinate resources, seeing
exactly how team members are deployed,
minute by minute.
Implementation
A&M-SA participates in the Community
Emergency Response Team (CERT) program
and, following best practice, it calls on its
volunteer responders to help with evacuations,
heading to the perimeter of any affected
area and helping secure it while officers
are dealing with the incident. The SafeZone
solution, with all its functions, has energized
this arrangement.
“The number of volunteers varies by
building size,” Stearns said. “But generally
speaking, we can expect three to four volunteers
per building to primarily assist with
building evacuation and perimeter control
during a drill or incident.”
The indoor-positioning system allows
control room officers to see exactly where
each team member is—police officers and
volunteers—in relation to one another and to
anyone calling for assistance. Those with
specialist medical training, or particular
emergency skills, are tagged on the system,
allowing incident controllers to see the locations
of the most appropriate responders.
Any person who is checked-in with the
system (which in the case of A&M-SA will
automatically include all responders) can be
tracked as they move through any building,
floor-by-floor.
Officers on patrol can see the alerts too,
and they can see who’s nearest to any situation
that needs assistance. This has helped to
streamline teamwork further. In one recent
incident, Stearns reports, the best responder
reached a room to deal with a medical emergency
even before the dispatch operator had
passed on additional details. Stearns says
that the tech is also providing more opportunities
to rehearse coordinated response during
drills.
Stearns is pleased with the way the technology
has been adopted and accepted by his
team. SafeZone is used on a daily basis and
is viewed as critical tool for his team to serve
the A&M-SA community.
“It’s a great system,” Stearns said. “Every
bit as good as I’d hoped.”
This article originally appeared in the March/April 2019 issue of Campus Security Today.