Security that belongs
on the drawing set.
Most security companies show up after the project closes. We get involved at the design phase — working alongside architects, interior designers, structural engineers, and PEs to build systems that are planned in, not patched on.
Security is usually the last thing coordinated — and the first thing that causes problems.
Most security vendors operate purely in the field. They don’t read drawing sets, they don’t coordinate with your GC, they don’t understand how their conduit runs affect your wall finishes or how a camera placement conflicts with your ceiling plan. The result is costly retrofits, visible hardware in the wrong places, and systems that compromise the design intent you spent months refining.
No drawing coordination
Most integrators never see the architectural set. Camera placements, conduit runs, and panel locations are decided on-site — often after walls are closed and finishes are in.
Late MEP conflicts
Security power requirements, conduit pathways, and low-voltage rough-in often collide with MEP work when there’s been no early coordination. Change orders follow.
Hardware that fights the design
Exposed cable runs, surface-mount housings, and equipment placed for coverage rather than aesthetics. The building looks right on paper and wrong in practice.
We integrate at the design phase — not the punchlist.
We work the same way your MEP consultants do: early engagement, coordinated documentation, and field execution that respects the intent of the drawings. No surprises. No late additions. No visible hardware that wasn’t planned for.
Early design consultation
We review your schematic or design development drawings and provide input on camera coverage, device placement, conduit routing, and power requirements before anything is committed.
Drawing set coordination
We provide security device location plans that slot directly into your drawing set — formatted for coordination with structural, MEP, and interior design disciplines.
Rough-in specification support
We produce conduit, power, and network rough-in specs your electrician can pull from — eliminating ambiguity during framing and reducing field improvisation.
Clean field installation
Our technicians work from the coordination drawings. Wire runs are planned, not improvised. Hardware is flush-mounted or concealed where the design calls for it.
- Security device location plan (PDF + DWG on request)
- Conduit and low-voltage rough-in schedule
- Power and network infrastructure requirements
- Camera coverage diagrams with field-of-view overlays
- Direct communication with your PM or project architect
- RFI response within 24 hours on active projects
- Attendance at coordination meetings on request
- Change order documentation that matches your format
We produce the documentation your project actually needs.
Security integrators that operate at the construction level produce documentation — not just invoices. We structure our submittals, as-builts, and closeout packages to integrate with your project manual and owner turnover requirements. If your project has a spec section for electronic safety and security, we can work to it.
Device location plans
Camera placement, access control device locations, and conduit routing shown on plan — formatted for coordination overlay with architectural and MEP drawings. Available in PDF or DWG.
Submittal packages
Cut sheets, mounting details, power and network requirements, and system diagrams — organized as a proper submittal with revision tracking. Formatted to drop into your submittal log without extra work.
Owner-furnished models
If your owner is procuring equipment directly, we can scope installation and commissioning separately — with clear documentation of what’s owner-furnished and what we’re responsible for.
As-builts & O&M manuals
As-built drawings, operations and maintenance manuals, warranty documentation, and owner training — delivered at substantial completion, formatted for your project record set.
— Specification section language for electronic safety & security scope
— Camera coverage diagrams with field-of-view overlays
— Conduit and low-voltage rough-in schedules
— Power and network infrastructure requirements per device
// Reach out early — the more lead time we have, the cleaner the documentation
Security decisions made late
cost everyone on the project.
When security is treated as a post-construction add-on, the entire project team absorbs the consequences — architects lose design intent, engineers get called back for coordination they should have been part of from the start, and owners pay for retrofits that could have been avoided with a single early conversation.
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Conduit roughed in right the first time No core drilling through completed finishes. No surface conduit on walls that were designed to be clean.
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Camera placement that respects the design intent Coverage is optimized from the drawing — not improvised around finished ceilings and millwork.
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One less coordination gap for your GC to manage We show up with documentation, not just tools. Your superintendent doesn’t have to translate between trades.
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A closeout package your owner can actually use As-builts, O&M manuals, warranty docs, and system training — delivered at substantial completion, not months after.
We’re not a vendor you call once. We’re the security partner your practice keeps on file.
Design and engineering firms that work with us once tend to keep working with us. Not because of a referral program — because a security integrator who shows up on time, provides real documentation, and doesn’t create problems for your project team is genuinely hard to find.
New construction
Ground-up residential and commercial builds. We engage at design development and carry through to commissioning and owner training.
Renovations & tenant improvements
Existing buildings with active security systems, legacy infrastructure, and owners with specific requirements. We assess what’s there and design around it.
High-end residential
Custom homes where the design intent matters as much as the coverage. Flush-mount hardware, concealed wiring, and systems that disappear into the architecture.
Bring us in
before the walls close.
Whether you’re in schematic design or heading into construction documents, the earlier we’re involved, the better the outcome for your project and your client.
