Sun, Surf & Surveillance

Compant installs IP video on San Diego's Mission Beach following attacks

Stretching several miles, Mission Beach, Calif., is the most popular beach area in San Diego, and it draws large crowds during the summer. Various shops, restaurants and beach rental outfits line its narrow boardwalk. Mission Beach offers limitless opportunities for sunbathing, surfing, bicycling, skateboarding and other outdoor activities.

Despite the beach area’s idyllic landscape, last year San Diego Public Safety recorded the largest number of violent crimes ever, including the sexual assault of two University of San Diego students in Mission Beach’s historic Belmont Park area. In response, residents collected more than $30,000 in private donations for a video surveillance system. An additional $80,000 was raised in a bond proposition.

Once funding was established, San Diego city officials contacted Dotworkz Systems Inc., a San Diego company that focuses on network-based video products.

“The city’s chief concerns were to deter crime on Mission Beach, to create a visual record of any incidents that may occur for proper investigation and to improve police response times,” said William Ferris, CEO of Dotworkz. “An analog CCTV system could not deliver what they needed. IP-based video, however, could achieve those objectives and more, plus add the capability for expansion without significant capital costs.”

As with all municipal projects, San Diego officials were concerned about budgeting. Dotworkz engineers pointed out that the cost of ownership for an IP system was comparable to that of an analog system employing digital recording, plus it provided more critical capabilities in applications similar to what was proposed on Mission Beach.

“While an IP camera is typically 30 to 50 percent more expensive than a similar analog camera, savings are realized in cabling infrastructure, recording equipment, labor and configuration,” Ferris said. “Using a price-to-performance ratio, IP video is far more cost-efficient for large-scale municipal projects, especially when wireless connectivity can be leveraged for video distribution.”

A Challenging Environment
Dotworkz used five network cameras to cover the relatively small perimeters of Belmont Park, mounting them on lifeguard houses and light poles. The cameras were selected for many reasons. In addition to their impressive pan/tilt capability, they are equipped with powerful 26x optical zoom, allowing officers monitoring the cameras to zoom in on small or distant objects with clarity. And because the cameras incorporate a day/night function, they capture images of the beach and boardwalk at night, when most crimes are committed.

Like all network cameras, the Sony SNCRZ50 contains sensitive electronics, such as a processor, a video compression engine and networking, which could be damaged in the extreme heat and direct sunlight of a beach. For that reason, all the cameras are contained within Dotworkz D2™ marine-ready enclosures equipped with heater-blower systems. Besides keeping the cameras cool, this system helps eliminate fogging of the lower lenses in the earlymorning mist.

Yet another reason for specifying the D2 was vandalism. Made of a thermoplastic alloy, the enclosure is exceptionally shock- and impactresistant. So much so, in fact, that it is presently in use by the U.S. military within Iraq’s Green Zone.

Dotworkz was no stranger to the challenges of mounting cameras in marine environments. It has been producing ruggedized marine-ready camera systems for years and has products in use around the globe in military and commercial maritime applications.

Going Wireless
Concerned about Wi-Fi interference in Mission Beach’s residential area, Dotworkz configured its D2 “city link” mesh option for four of the five cameras on a powerful 5.8 GHz wireless spectrum. This provided the means to wirelessly transmit high-resolution video at up to 20 frames per second with 108 MB throughput back to the police command center located two miles away. The fifth camera, stationed on a light pole across from the historic Belmont Giant Dipper Roller Coaster and Wave House water park, is equipped with a Dotworkz 2.4 GHz 802.11 b/g SideKick™.

“Wireless connectivity gives the Mission Beach system additional flexibility and scalability, plus saves the municipality the cost of wiring and installation labor,” Ferris said. “Right now, the video is sent to the public safety’s personnel command center, but in the future, roving police may add camera access on their laptops, PDAs and smart phones.”

Video archiving is achieved using the Dotworkz NVR Serverware to optimize the 24/7 video requirement. The NVR Serverware is engineered for maximum performance and reliability. It was specified with a Seagate® security-based hard drive with RAID configuration to prevent lost data, along with a host of other reliability features.

Tying together the system is enterpriseclass NetDVMS™ software from On-Net Surveillance Systems Inc. This recording and camera management software suite required little user training for the officers and no additional hardware. NetDVMS gives the light-duty police officers in the command center immediate and centralized access to all five cameras, along with schedulable PTZ patrol sequences when the system is not actively manned.

New Wave Cameras
Residents were worried that surveillance cameras would leave Belmont Park resembling a prison on lockdown and take away from the public’s beach experience. However, once the enclosures were installed, the residents’ concerns were alleviated. Rounded and nonthreatening in appearance, the D2 easily can be mistaken for an outdoor light fixture.

The D2 is a favorite among architects. Not only is it stylish, but it can be painted virtually any color to tie in with the client’s design goals. For example, Dotworkz recently painted several D2s sky blue with white clouds to blend into a ceiling. Camouflage also is a popular choice.

“We want to challenge the notion that surveillance products have to look like Big Brother props,” said Ferris, who welcomes the trend toward customizing public safety cameras. “This industry helps make the public safer, so why not engineer our cameras and enclosures to be part of the communities we protect?”

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