Curbside Security
        The first significantly new fire hydrant in more than a century could—and should—revolutionize the industry
        
        
			- By Ronnie Rittenberry
 - Aug 01, 2012
 
		
        
		Of all the accoutrements of civilization—and
  they are myriad, from plumbing to Pop-
  Tarts—perhaps none is more routinely taken
  for granted than the lowly fire hydrant. Like squat little
  sentries standing curbside in all seasons, they dot
  our neighborhoods and cityscapes almost as ubiquitously
  as stop signs, yet, except by firefighters and
  maybe dog walkers and their leashed lieges (who cannot
  seem to help expressing their feelings on the subject),
  hydrants mostly go unnoticed—until, of course,
  they’re needed.
  
When that happens and every second suddenly becomes
  the difference between life and death, the fire
  hydrant becomes the critical piece of equipment in the
  firefighter’s arsenal. Water brought to the scene of an
  emergency in a dump tank can make a huge difference,
  but without a fully functional hydrant on hand,
  firefighting can go only so far.
  
What even a quick Internet search of the phrase
  “faulty fire hydrant” reveals is that, far too often,
  firefighters arrive on the scene only to find malfunctioning
  or “dead” hydrants and then, while lives and
  property hang in the balance, they have to use precious
  time either finding a plug that does work or another
  alternative. It is a particularly stress-filled and
  ultimately costly scenario that some in the industry
  frustratedly refer to as “fire hydrant roulette.”
  
“It’s crucial when you pull up to a fire hydrant that
  it works, that it’s reliable, and when it’s not, you just
  go to the next one and the next and the next,” said former
  New York City firefighter George Sigelakis. “The
  public has a false sense of security regarding hydrants.
  We don’t talk about it, but from my experience, the
  chances are when you need a fire hydrant—when you
  need it the most—it doesn’t work.”
  
After an injury prompted his retirement from active
  duty in November 2000, Sigelakis set out to do
  what had not been done in more than a century: design
  and build a better fire hydrant. Working off ideas he
  formed early on as a firefighter and picking up patents
  along the way, he co-founded Sigelock Systems LLC
  in 2009 and soon thereafter introduced the Sigelock
  Spartan, which in May 2012 became the first—and, at
  this writing, still only—hydrant to achieve Underwriters
  Laboratories’ UL246B certification for a standard
  titled “Tamper-Resistant Features of Hydrants for
  Fire-Protection Service.”
  
Now, as Sigelock’s president and CEO, Sigelakis is
  on a mission to spread the word about his invention,
  which is designed not only to deter threats—both
  from those trying to remove water illegally and those
  trying to contaminate the water within—but also to
  conserve public resources by not allowing the water to
  leak out underground, which is an expensive problem
  with existing hydrants.
  
Active Spartan installations are in the ground as
  part of pilot programs in a smattering of cities, including
  Long Beach, N.Y., and, in its second year,
  Franklin, Pa., but Sigelakis has only just begun. His
  goal is rightly lofty: to improve the safety and security
  of cities everywhere. To do that, he has to get people
  to stop taking these things for granted.
  
Consider the Clam
  
Firefighters are forced to take part in the roulette routine
  for a number of reasons. Aged, weathered and
  corroded hydrant parts resulting in dysfunctional operating
  nuts, rusted caps and leaking seals are part of
  it, but so is vandalism, including not only the theft
  of water but of the hydrants’ brass and bronze parts.
  Damages caused by vehicular impact and a lack of
  maintenance in general are further exacerbations.
  
Maintenance of existing hydrants is a very necessary
  part of the current hydrant industry, and although
  it means big bucks for those who perform it,
  the system remains inadequate.
One of the starting places for the Spartan’s design
  was the use of non-corrosive, stainless steel materials
  requiring little to no maintenance. But what sets
  Sigelakis’s hydrant apart, even at first glance, are the
  security features built in to prevent unauthorized use.
  While they give the Spartan a space-age appearance,
  Sigelakis said the concept’s inspiration came straight
  from the earth.
  
“I grew up on a beach and was always fascinated
  by how the clam protects itself, how it locks inside itself
  so predators can’t pry it open,” he said. “So I devised
  a cap that would lock over the operating nut and
  also secure the outlets where the water comes out by
  locking inside the mechanism. Eventually, I encapsulated
  everything so there are no pry points—nothing
  is sticking out or protruding, so people can’t get hurt,
  but they also can’t attack the device.”
  
The resulting patented locking clamshell technology
  the Spartan sports proved impervious to the
  stringent attack tests that were part of its achieving
  UL246B certification. On the other hand, with the
  right opening mechanism, authorized personnel can
  unlock the Spartan and gain access to water in less
  than five seconds, which, according to Sigelakis, is
  about 25 seconds faster than with existing hydrants
  even under perfect conditions that rarely if ever exist.
  
Water the Odds?
  
The fire hydrant industry represents big business. No
  one knows how many individual hydrants exist because
  recordkeeping was spotty in the 1860s when the castiron
  versions made their debut. Even when records
  were kept, many were, ironically, lost in fires.
  
Sigelakis estimates there are at least 40 million hydrants
  in the United States alone, and maybe twice
  that. Whatever the number, it represents a lot of vested
  interest in maintaining the status quo by those entrenched
  in the industry.
  
Infrastructure improvements can move slowly, and
  Sigelakis has no delusions regarding the difficulties of
  revolutionizing the whole hydrant industry, but he is
  nevertheless certain that change is needed, and he has
  devoted himself to providing the means.
  
“Municipalities spend billions of dollars on firefighter
  apparatus, high-tech equipment, manpower
  and everything else, but the most important tool of all
  to fight a fire is the fire hydrant, and it’s also the most
  neglected,” he said. “What we have now with existing
  hydrants doesn’t work—not well enough. Mine does,
  and it’s needed. Its time has come.”
  
For more information about Sigelock Systems and
  the Spartan, visit www.sigelock.com.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        This article originally appeared in the August 2012 issue of Security Today.