Guide Series
18 pages
Mining CCTV is a specialist branch of surveillance. A mine is not a warehouse with more dust, and it is not a farm with bigger gates. The useful questions are different: where does the site need fixed evidence views, where does it need long-range detection, where does thermal solve a real visibility problem, and where do hazardous-area rules mean an ordinary camera should not even be considered?
Guide Series
15 pages
Medical-centre CCTV should protect reception, waiting areas, staff-only access points, and after-hours entry without treating clinical privacy casually. The strongest designs support safety and incident review while keeping the purpose of each camera narrow and clear.
Guide Series
11 pages
Construction-site CCTV should be built around real theft targets, access points, and after-hours site conditions. The strongest systems support gates, compounds, storage containers, temporary offices, and material laydown areas instead of relying on a token overview camera.
Guide Series
11 pages
A warehouse CCTV design should help the operator understand movements, protect goods and assets, support incident review, improve after-hours security, and fit the site's traffic realities. The stronger systems are built around operational questions, not just camera count.
Guide Series
10 pages
A farm CCTV system should be designed around gates, sheds, fuel, machinery, livestock areas, and remote access points, not around generic package language. Rural sites are exactly where camera type, connectivity, and night strategy matter most.
Includes
- How to Design Farm Gate and Driveway Coverage Properly
- Machinery Sheds, Workshops, Diesel, and Farm Service Areas
- Stockyards, Paddocks, Water Points, Tanks, and Remote Farm Infrastructure
- Solar, 4G, Battery, and Long-Range Planning for Farm CCTV
Guide Series
8 pages
A childcare CCTV system has to do more than record footage. It should support safe arrivals and pickups, improve front-entry control, help management review incidents properly, and strengthen after-hours protection without pretending to replace active supervision or clear service procedures.
Guide Series
8 pages
Car-yard CCTV should be built around stock protection, office access, key control, test-drive movement, and after-hours perimeter security. The strongest systems combine disciplined fixed evidence views with broader overview only where the site genuinely needs it.
Guide Series
8 pages
Transport-depot CCTV should support gate control, dispatch and loading visibility, yard movement review, driver and vehicle access, and after-hours perimeter security without pretending it replaces formal traffic-management controls.
Guide Series
8 pages
Good strata CCTV helps the owners corporation, apartment manager, or body corporate protect common property, review incidents, and support safer daily use of the building without turning the site into a poorly governed surveillance patchwork.
Guide Series
7 pages
Car wash CCTV is not just about putting one wide camera above the site. It needs to handle wet conditions, bright reflections, vehicle flow, payment points, bays, vacuums, and after-hours vandalism or theft without relying on guesswork.
Guide Series
7 pages
Driveway and gate CCTV should be built around vehicle approach, entry control, plate and occupant visibility, gate hardware, and after-hours deterrence. The strongest systems are deliberate about angle and lens choice rather than relying on one broad front-yard camera.
Guide Series
7 pages
Jewellery stores need disciplined CCTV, not generic retail coverage. Entry identification, display visibility, consultation counters, workshop and stockroom access, and after-hours burglary resistance all matter more here than broad general shop-floor overview.
Guide Series
7 pages
Large-house CCTV should be designed around entries, garages, side paths, pools, rear yards, and boundary access rather than treated like a small suburban doorbell-camera job. The strongest systems match the camera type to each zone.
Guide Series
7 pages
Petrol station CCTV should be designed around the forecourt, shop entry, counter, till, and after-hours access points, not treated like a generic convenience store. The best systems support staff safety, vehicle review, and drive-off evidence without leaving blind spots around the pumps.
Guide Series
7 pages
Pharmacy CCTV has to balance security, medicine protection, staff safety, patient-facing service, and privacy. The strongest designs protect the counter, dispensary boundary, stock areas, and after-hours access points without treating the pharmacy like a generic retail shop.
Guide Series
7 pages
Pubs and clubs need CCTV that supports entry control, bar and till visibility, gaming or higher-risk areas, smoking-area review, and after-hours security. The strongest systems are disciplined about fixed evidence coverage in the areas that actually matter during incidents.
Guide Series
7 pages
Restaurant and cafe CCTV should support staff safety, entry and counter visibility, cash-handling points, rear access, and after-hours review without treating every customer table as the centre of the design.
Guide Series
7 pages
Rooming-house CCTV should support the main entry, common areas, external paths, and after-hours security without crossing privacy boundaries around residents' rooms, bathrooms, or other clearly private spaces.
Guide Series
7 pages
Shopping-centre CCTV should be designed around entries, mall intersections, escalators, loading and service corridors, car parks, and incident review. The strongest systems combine strong fixed evidence views with broader overview where the centre is large enough to justify it.
Guide Series
7 pages
Storage-facility CCTV should be built around gate control, office and intercom points, corridor access, lift or roller-door movement, and after-hours perimeter risk. The strongest designs combine disciplined fixed cameras with broader overview only where the site layout justifies it.
Guide Series
7 pages
A well-designed parking CCTV system is built around vehicle movement, pedestrian safety, isolation points, and incident review. It should never be reduced to a few wide-angle cameras and a hope that the footage will be useful later.
Guide Series
7 pages
Retail CCTV works best when it answers the questions store owners actually ask later: who came in, what happened at the counter, which aisle mattered, how stock left the rear of the shop, and what the site looked like after hours. That usually means a layered system, not a generic package.