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ESSMA Safety & Security Workshop 2022 Dallmeier Shows Video Security Solutions for Stadiums

Dallmeier, a leading manufacturer of video security technology for stadiums, was official sponsor of this year’s ESSMA Safety & Security Workshop. On 29 and 30 March 2022, stadium security and safety experts had the opportunity to learn about video-based security and business solutions at the Allianz Arena in Munich With more than 150 successful projects worldwide, Dallmeier is one of the market leaders in video security for stadiums. The heart of many solutions is the manufacturer’s patented Panomera® multifocal sensor system, which allows security personnel and police to capture large grandstand areas with consistently high image quality and a minimum amount of camera systems. Particularly in combination with the Dallmeier HEMISPHERE® software platform, pyrotechnics violations, racist riots or bodily harm can be tracked and managed – and costs resulting from fines, for example, can be reduced. Crowd management through unified security systems By supporting common interfaces, HEMISPHERE® can integrate and correlate camera data and data from all kinds of security systems such as access control, fire and intrusion detection systems and building automation. Unified access via interactive 3D maps allows users to benefit from a ‘single pane of glass’ that can be used for a wide range of applications. These include a full overview of all stadium areas, automatic intrusion detection for ‘sterile areas,’ functions for quickly locating suspicious persons and support for emergency services. “Whether for grandstand security or software-supported process optimization – Panomera® and HEMISPHERE® open up previously unknown possibilities for stadium operators,” explained Maximilian Strangemann, Stadium Expert of the Dallmeier Group, “Far beyond mere image capture, Dallmeier solutions allow data and information from a wide range of sources to be intelligently correlated – for efficient crowd & security management and safe, smooth stadium operation.”  

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NIST Offers First-of-a-Kind Guidance for Holistic Home & Community Wildfire Protection

Once they have a foothold, severe wildfires can quickly overwhelm a community, particularly one that is densely packed. To shield houses against such a fierce threat, a thorough defense is key. Establishing a deep and multifaceted defense in and around homes is the basis of a new report that offers direction for safeguarding residences from external fire threats. Developed by fire safety experts at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) and the Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS), the guidance provides dozens of protective actions – and the context in which each should be taken – all backed by the latest fire science. This new approach, which is already being implemented in California by the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES) and CAL FIRE through a pilot program called the California Wildfire Mitigation Program, could spare homes and lives from the intensifying threat of wildfires. “We’ve seen all these destructive wildfires come through and burn thousands of homes. The way we aim to reduce those losses is to upgrade structures and then create defensible space around them,” said Steven Hawks, CAL FIRE Chief and Report Co-Author. The strategy described in the report is the keystone of the recently launched California pilot program, which is meant to provide support to communities statewide. While the guidance is available for anyone to implement voluntarily, the cost of putting it into practice may be steep for some. “That’s where the California Wildfire Mitigation Program really steps in and provides the expertise, the education, the funding to back all of those mitigation measures at the level of each individual property,” Hawks said. With significant gaps in fire codes and regulations such as the lack of measures that address fire spread between properties, CAL FIRE worked closely with NIST and IBHS researchers to produce a more comprehensive defensive strategy. The authors of the report compiled methods to protect against wildfires’ two main weapons of choice – flames and airborne pieces of burning debris called embers. For a home to be made fire resistant, or hardened, up to 40 different components – such as windows, gutters and the deck – may need to be upgraded, either by adding to or replacing them with less flammable material. And because of how pervasive embers are, all 40 boxes must be checked in the end for a homeowner to reap much of any reward. “If you have literally a million embers flying about your home and you have vulnerabilities, they’re going to find them,” said Alexander Maranghides, a NIST fire Protection Engineer and Lead Author of the report, “Hardening half of your home is not going to give you 50% improvement. You cannot pick and choose.” In contrast, flames exhibit a much shorter reach than embers, and the approach for fending them off is more tailored to a home’s individual circumstances. The authors advise assessing the types and proximity of combustible features on a home’s lot and surrounding lots to determine where potential flames are a threat and identify appropriate actions. The first line of defense for flames is to either remove combustible items such as wooden furniture or sheds, or push them away from a home by a distance the authors determined to be safe. authors determined to be safe. “In cases where a combustible object, such as a neighboring home, is dangerously close and moving it is not a realistic option, the guidance recommends hardening specific home features that would be in striking distance as a last resort,” Maranghides said, “This might mean having just the wall facing a neighboring home clad in a non-combustible material, for example.” The implementation of this strategy by every residence is especially critical in crowded neighborhoods where only a few feet may separate homes, potentially linking their fates in the event of a wildfire. In California, the guidance is already seeing action through the pilot program, with Cal OES and CAL FIRE using it to assess and upgrade the properties of homeowners in three pilot communities across the state, including San Diego, Shasta and Lake Counties. For Maranghides, the hope is that California is only the beginning. With several other states already grappling with an ever-increasing wildfire threat, the new, holistic approach for protecting homes and thus communities could be broadly applied throughout the U.S.  

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