Industry Vertical
A Comprehensive Solution
The importance of having a reliable video surveillance strategy at a marathon
- By Sarah Colson
- Feb 01, 2015
The New York City marathon is hosted the first
week of November with more than 2 million
spectators, 50,000 runners, and thousands of
staff and volunteers. When it came time to planning
the logistics for a successful event for the
world’s largest marathon, safety and preventive actions were
the most important criteria.
In order to help deliver a safe and successful marathon,
a comprehensive surveillance system needed to be installed
through the five boroughs of New York City. Installing a temporary
video surveillance system across a 26.2 miles course is
no small feat. With no room for error, the chosen surveillance
system needed be able to protect against potential threat and increase
overall situational awareness.
Seneca was chosen to provide the video surveillance hardware
including the network video recorder and client viewing
stations for recording and monitoring at the event.
On a traditional install, contractors have months to
plan, install, test, and commission all required communication
infrastructure. On a temporary system, all aspects
are truncated time-wise, with the installation time
taking the biggest hit. One of the biggest challenges
was providing a comprehensive system that was able
to integrate multiple technologies without failure.
The communication of the network video recorder,
variety of different cameras, video management
software, analytics software, networking, and client
viewing stations had to work seamlessly with
no downtime or room for failure. Ensuring that
all of the components worked together
seamlessly allowed officials to
monitor any suspicious behavior
and respond to prevent any harmful activities; ensuring the
safety to the New York City area and the marathon.
Project Solution
A range of different camera models were installed across multiple
buildings, street corners, temporary poles and traffic lights
to provide coverage for the entire route of the marathon. All
of those camera feeds were processed and stored on Seneca’s
xVault NVR.
With hundreds of video feeds streaming into the race’s command
center through commercial-grade monitors were controlled
by Seneca’s xVault client viewing stations (xView), which
allowed command staff to control and monitor tactical camera
operation and video footage. The race command center showed
dozens of cameras feeding real-time data to race staff, incident
commanders, and law enforcement officials to increase the overall
situational awareness for the marathon. The monitoring
center allowed staff members and law enforcement to observe
the progress of the race from beginning to end. This solution
contributed to the New York City Marathon goals to increase
situational awareness and provide preventive action as needed
for suspicious events.
The volume of runners and spectators increased through the
park throughout the day which only meant that the video surveillance
solution had to work harder. In order to provide coverage
across the entire length of the marathon, the solution needed
to have the ability to actively monitor all activity through the
use of advanced video analytics. From time to time during the
marathon, live video was pushed from smart phones to the race
command center to view activities in more detail. This way the
New York City Marathon surveillance staff was able to capture
video footage by the senior staff’s mobile camera. This allowed coverage in areas that surveillance cameras
may not have been able to capture,
increasing the overall safety and situational
awareness for the marathon.
“Having the ability to push live
video into the field allows security personnel
to fully understand, monitor,
and react accordingly to each potential
security threat,” said Toby Heath, business
development manager at Seneca.
Outcome and Benefits Realized
Seneca’s surveillance solution of xVault
network video recorders and client
viewing stations that were deployed at
the New York City Marathon played
a major role in helping to ensure the
safety and security of the entire event.
A reliable video surveillance recording
platform and high-resolution viewing
stations that accurately portray the live/
recorded images are two key aspects to
any effective video surveillance system.
Without these two items, all other components
bring little value.
The ability to actively monitor all
activity and live video feeds through the
command center was one of the most
important actives in order to ensure
safety for the entire community. Using
Seneca’s client viewing solution the
race’s command team was able to effectively
monitor all activity and respond
accordingly. The command team consisted
of local, state, and federal officials
who utilized the video surveillance
solution to monitor all activities and respond
appropriately to any events that
occurred throughout the day.
The command center team was able
increase situational awareness throughout
the day with a wide range of activities.
These activities allowed the team
to provide surveillance monitoring to a
larger area without having to increase
manpower. This strategy started with
the items that the New York City Marathon
allowed runners to carry into the
race, excluding any items that could
cause any harm and/or alarm anyone
involved in the race. The command center
was very thorough with the process
of monitoring the video feeds, obtaining
necessary information, and disseminating
information about any potential
threats. Finally, situational awareness
was enhanced through the use of social
media. The New York City Marathon
promoted using social media to post
suspicious person or behavior through
media outlets such as Twitter, Facebook
and Instagram.
The strategy executed throughout the
race provided the tools necessary to improve
the command center team’s ability
to make well-informed decisions in real
time to ensure safety for the race and
community. The ability to have features
to zoom-in on suspicious objects and
activities improved overall efficiency in
deploying security enforcement officers.
One of the most valuable tools for this
success is the ability to push video/photos
to all security/safety personnel of
suspicious persons, objects or vehicles.
“Seneca was pleased to be able to
provide the solution for the New York
City Marathon for a safe and secure
event without any incidents,” said Ron
VanTassel, market development manager,
Seneca.
The success of this New York City
Marathon demonstrates the importance
of having a well thought out
surveillance strategy for large public
events. The surveillance strategy for the
marathon covered every aspect from
the proper positioning of surveillance
equipment, and security personnel to
the communication of increased surveillance
measures to the public.
This article originally appeared in the February 2015 issue of Security Today.