Informational
Accessible Security Room-by-Room Layouts
Layout planning
Room-by-room table
| Area | Useful security layer | Accessibility check | Privacy boundary |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bed or overnight position | Reachable panic button, phone/communication device charging, responder plan. | Can help be activated without sitting up, transferring or reaching across unsafe distance? | Avoid cameras unless there is a serious, consented care reason. |
| Wheelchair transfer point | Panic button nearby, good lighting, optional agreed camera only if needed. | Can the person call for help if transfer fails? | Do not aim cameras into private rooms. |
| Front door and ramp | Video intercom, entry camera, lighting, door release only if safe. | Can the person answer without moving to the door? | Avoid capturing neighbours or shared areas unnecessarily. |
| Living or main chair position | Panic button, intercom monitor, phone charger, app device. | Are controls reachable from the actual chair or wheelchair position? | Viewing rules if cameras cover shared living areas. |
| Support-worker entry | Entry camera, intercom, access method, roster rules. | Can trusted people enter without forcing the person to move unsafely? | No hidden monitoring of workers or visitors. |
| Garage or accessible vehicle area | Camera, lighting, panic path if the person enters alone. | Can help be called if a transfer or mobility issue happens near the vehicle? | Keep camera view purposeful. |
Example layout: wheelchair user living independently
Layout red flags
- The intercom screen is mounted at standing height only.
- The panic button is reachable in a normal moment but not during distress.
- The NVR or router power point is easy to switch off accidentally.
- Support-worker entry is planned with shared keys or codes but no review process.
- The camera view solves family anxiety but not the person's stated need.
















