Let the Games Begin
The 2010 Alltech World Equestrian Games will be one of the world’s most technologically advanced security deployments
For the first time in history,
the World Equestrian
Games leaves Europe
and comes to the United
States, where, also for the
first time, all eight disciplines
will be held at one
location: the Kentucky Horse Park in
Lexington, Ky., a 1,200-acre working
horse farm, theme park and equine
competition center. This year, the
World Equestrian Games has a title
sponsor, Alltech, an animal health and
nutrition group.
From Sept. 25 to Oct. 10, 2010,
more than 900 of the most skilled
horses and 800 top riders, representing
more than 60 countries, will compete
for the world championship in eight
equestrian sports: dressage, driving,
endurance, eventing, jumping, para
dressage, reining and vaulting. The
games are held every four years and
are governed by the Fédération Equestre
Internationale.
The event attracts approximately
500 million television viewers from
around the world, and the Kentucky
Horse Park will welcome more than a
half a million guests.
For such a momentous event, the
Fédération Equestre Internationale
and the Kentucky Horse Park left nothing
to chance. The safety and security
of the games were top of mind.
Off to the Races
When the Kentucky Horse Park was
selected to host the 2010 games, officials
at FEI and the Kentucky Horse
Park approached EMC’s John McKenzie,
business development manager for
EMC Physical Security, for a solution.
EMC is the official provider of security
solutions for the state of Kentucky.
McKenzie met with Kevin Tyo, president
and owner of Event Security Consulting
and Operations, who was hired
by FEI to be in charge of security.
After presenting EMC’s offerings
and ideas, Tyo hired the company as
the solutions provider for the games.
EMC was tasked with providing
general surveillance and protection for
the attendees, equines and athletes. The
security system must provide physical
surveillance of the land, crowd control
and monitoring at access and moneyexchange
points, as well as equine protection
at the stables and the warm-up
and competition areas.
The solution
also will extend to many venues within
the park, including a new indoor arena
and an outdoor stadium, a covered
arena and the Equine Village, an area
that will feature equine celebrities, performers
and clinicians.
Sophisticated
temporary structures will be erected for
hospitality services, the media, sponsor
showrooms, volunteers, veterinary
clinics and special attractions, including
the Grooms Village, Trade Show
Village, the Alltech Experience and the
Kentucky Experience. These structures
require monitoring as well.
The Players
EMC chose high-resolution, IP, minidome
cameras from Verint, and 3- and
5-megapixel day/night cameras from
Arecont.
Several Arecont Vision AV5105DN
H.264 5-megapixel day/night IP network
surveillance cameras will be
installed throughout the park. The
cameras maintain full-motion progressive-
scan 280x1024 video at 30
fps, 1600x1200 at 24 fps, 2048x1536
at 15 fps and 2592x1944 at 9 fps. With
MegaVideo technology, the cameras
can output multiple image formats,
allowing the simultaneous viewing of
the full-resolution field of view and
regions of interest for high-definition
forensic zooming.
“Arecont Vision frequently works
with EMC on many large-scale projects
that require megapixel imaging,”
said Raul Calderon, vice president of
marketing at Arecont Vision. “When
EMC asked if we wanted to join them
as solutions sponsors for the WEG, we
thought it was a great way to showcase
our joint-solutions capabilities. Together
with EMC, Orion, Theia Technologies
and Verint, we at Arecont Vision
are proud to be one of the technology
sponsors for the games.”
For wide-area coverage, EMC partnered
with Theia Technologies for
their unique SY125M ultra-wide-angle
lenses, which enhance the capability
of megapixel cameras by providing a
135-degree field of view, along with
digital and horizontal correction, which
does away with fisheye distortion.
Twenty SY125M lenses will be outfitted
on the Arecont AV5105 DN cameras
that will monitor high-security
areas. Patented Linear Optical Technology
provides real-time distortion
correction that eliminates fisheye distortion
without the use of software and
provides increased resolution at image
edges, improving the ability to recognize
subjects.
“Theia is proud to team with industry
leaders EMC Physical Security,
Arecont Vision, Verint and Orion to be
a part of the video surveillance solution
for the World Equestrian Games,” said
Jeff Gohman, president and co-founder
of Theia Technologies. “Theia lenses,
in conjunction with the other sponsors’
world-class video surveillance products
and services, will provide the immediate,
undistorted, clear images needed to
ensure the security of World Equestrian
Games participants and spectators.”
Verint is supplying several Nextiva
S2700e cameras, S1816e video encoders
and S4300-BR wireless bridges.
The Nextiva S2700e high-resolution,
IP mini-dome cameras use a CCD sensor
for high-quality images with a horizontal
resolution of 540 TV lines. Designed
for both color and day-to-night
use, the cameras deliver dual-stream,
DVD-quality video at 4 CIF/30 fps.
Low 0.4 lux sensitivity produces clear,
crisp images, even in poor lighting conditions.
In low lighting conditions, the
cameras automatically adjust to blackand-
white mode for optimal image
clarity. Auto-iris technology automatically
adjusts the amount of light that
reaches the image sensors, optimizing
image quality in a variety of lighting
conditions.
The S1816e 16-port video encoders
deliver up to 4 CIF/15 fps on every
port -- with the bitrate of H.264 video
encoding technology, reducing bandwidth
and storage utilization up to 50
percent over MPEG-4. The S1816e-SP
features onboard motion detection,
camera tampering detection and storage
on the edge -- a failover mechanism
that ensures video is recorded if connection
with management software is lost.
The S4300-BR wireless bridges are
designed to transfer video images between
two LANs when a wired connection
is not available, or to transmit
video from IP cameras.
The bridges can be deployed in either
point-to-point or point-to-multipoint
outdoor applications. The devices
transmit video over the license-free 2.4
or 5 GHz wireless band or the licensed
4.9 GHz U.S. or Canada public safety
band. A built-in, multi-band antenna
lets users switch wireless frequencies by
reconfiguring the software, rather than
replacing the entire unit.
“Covering the 1,224-acre Kentucky
Horse Park would have been very difficult
without the use of our wireless
bridges,” said Courtney Jaret, marketing
director of video intelligence solutions
for Verint Systems. “Being able to
work in the licensed municipal 4.9 GHz
frequency bands lets us avoid problems
with what will certainly be a busy and
unregulated wireless environment during
the games.”
A dedicated security network, based
on a fiber backbone, was installed to
handle access control, intrusion detection
and video surveillance. All the video
will feed back to IP-based, off-theshelf
servers running on the Nextiva
video management platform, which allows
for extreme flexibility and scalability
for camera count, configuration and
video management. The video streams
are saved, archived and managed on an
EMC Clarion storage-area network.
This storage platform provides efficient
and quick response for data processing
that exceeds the games’ need for video
management and security.
“Verint is pleased to partner with
Arecont Vision, as well as EMC, Orion
and Theia Technologies, at the 2010
Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games,”
said Elan Moriah, president of Verint
Video Intelligence Solutions and Verint
Witness Actionable Solutions. “We’re
honored to take part in this historic
event, leveraging our world-class networked
IP video solutions to enhance
awareness, and the security of athletes
and attendees.”
Corralling the Team
The entire solution was designed, configured
and installed by Orion Systems,
the current system integrator for EMC
Security Systems for projects throughout
the nation.
“Orion Systems Group is pleased to
be part of the 2010 Alltech FEI World
Equestrian Games Security Solutions
Team,” said Paul Garver, president of
Orion Systems Group. “Our team will
be showcasing the latest best-in-class
advancements in technology with Arecont
Vision’s megapixel cameras, Theia’s
ultra-wide megapixel lenses, EMC
storage and Verint’s enterprise IP video
management software on an international
stage. The venue for the World
Equestrian Games is more than 1,200
acres and presents numerous design
and deployment challenges that will allow
Orion Systems Group to highlight
the best practices and technologies that
must be leveraged to successfully deploy
and operate an enterprise-class surveillance
system across a large geographic
area -- with little or no existing network
infrastructure.”
Orion Systems Group will be onsite
during the entire event, along with
Verint field engineers, to manage and
maintain the integrity of the system.
Last-minute Surprises
As with any high-profile, large-scale
project, changes and adjustments are
inevitable, and the security solution
must be flexible and scalable enough to
implement the changes quickly and easily.
As the games draw near, the security
providers have been forewarned by
FEI to expect last-minute integration
requests and adjustments from federal
law enforcement.
So far, FEI officials have been extremely
pleased by how EMC handles
work-order changes. To date, all changes
have been completed without buying
new equipment. EMC simply advised
Orion on what the client needed, and
Orion was able to make simple programming
changes to achieve the desired
result.
“They bring change orders to me and
expect me to say, ‘OK, that’s going to
cost $10,000 for this equipment’; but I
just tell Orion what they need, and they
can make programming changes to satisfy
the client’s need,” McKenzie said.
Betting on Success
With the historic decision to let the
United States host this year’s games,
the organizers have entrusted the security
providers with ensuring the games’
success and the nation’s reputation. As
such, more than $1 million worth of
security products will be deployed for
the games.
“The contribution EMC is making
toward the 2010 Games will not only
make the games safe and successful
for all visitors, but also has potential
to enhance the Kentucky Horse Park
as a world-class facility,” said Jamie
Link, CEO of the World Games 2010
Foundation.
EMC partners with top vendors to
provide best-of-breed solutions. McKenzie
said EMC chose Verint for their
products’ ease of use and flexibility;
Arecont because their price points and
performance exceeded their competitors;
Theia for their unique lenses; and
Orion because they are a trusted partner
that understands Kentucky.
“As the second largest event to take
place in North America -- other than
the Olympics -- we are excited to be
the official physical security solutions
provider for the World Equestrian
Games,” said Dick O’Leary, senior
director of EMC’s Global Solutions.
“The sheer size and scope of the event
highlight the need for organizations
to quickly analyze and respond to
the vast amounts of captured security
data. Working with Arecont Vision,
Orion, Theia and Verint, we will
provide the World Equestrian Games
with the most comprehensive security
solution across a wide campus so their
security experts can make better and
quicker decisions to ensure the safety
and protection of all spectators and
participants.”
This article originally appeared in the issue of .
About the Author
Sherleen Mahoney is a Web managing editor at 1105 Media.