Hardening the workplace
Property managers are bulletproofing,
adding extra checkpoints, barricading against car bombs
and reviewing structural integrity.
by Brett Lieberman
When Gene Samburg enters buildings to assess
security, he often signs his name as "Donald Duck"
to see if guards are paying attention. Often they are
not. He uses other tricks as well. At one building in
New York, security checks were so meticulous that it
took visitors 50 minutes to gain admittance. Samburg
still managed to compromise security. After he got in
the building, he photocopied his visitors badge
when no one was looking. He used it days later when
he revisited the site.
Security experts such as Samburg say
they keep finding simple ways to compromise the security
of buildings even after the horrific attacks on New
York and Washington on Sept. 11. Its not that
theres a lack of interest. Anxious property
managers are calling in droves at the offices of security
advisors including Samburg, who is president and founder
of Arlington-based Kastle Systems LLC.
Corporate executives want to protect
their employees, their clients and their physical plants.
There is plenty that can be done. Heavy concrete planters
added to driveways can thwart car bombers. Materials
and the design of windows and doors can be upgraded
to withstand blasts and bullets. More sophisticated
access systems can be added, including biometric ones
that identify employees by the unchangeable iris of
their eyes. More cameras can be installed and steel
beams put in place. New X-ray machines in mailrooms
can spot mail bombs and there are even infrared devices
that can scan letters for anthrax and destroy the spores.
But all of this costs lots of money.
For even small businesses, top-level security can cost
hundreds of thousands of dollars and even up into the
millions. Some companies have gone on spending binges
that are over-the-top. Yet purely reactive moves can
be window dressing that may make management executives
or tenants feel more secure without adding real protection.
"A lot of people who havent got a clue are
just throwing manpower at the problem, and its
a joke," says Samburg, whose company helps protect
70 percent of Washington, D.C., area commercial properties.
"People should ... stop knee jerking and think
about it for 10 minutes."
The first step for harried managers
is to consider if a property is really a target. Though
many companies are concerned about security, not every
building is really that important in the eyes of terrorists.
For example, a building that houses sensitive government
agencies or a business that does defense work or whose
attack would seriously disrupt the economy or threaten
lives should get serious attention. This category might
include telecommunications switching centers, electricity
grid or natural gas control rooms or chemical plants
that handle large amounts of toxic gases. Yet other
companies whose work is not that immediately critical
or whose offices might be in more remote areas may not
need increased security. "You have to be pretty
honest about your threat level. Do you really need steel
beams?" asks Bill Dean of M.C. Dean Inc. of Chantilly.
The firm provides engineering and technical services
for security, telecommunications and energy systems.
To help bewildered clients, Samburg
has developed a 20-minute PowerPoint presentation to
help companies ponder their needs as well as whats
practical. Most properties can be made safer, but he
and other security experts say every building does not
require a Fort Knox level of protection.
Once they consider how good a target
they are, executives should draw up a disaster plan.
"One thing that doesnt cost much and should
be the first step is to develop a plan," says Dean.
Companies need to practice just as they would for a
fire drill. Should disaster strike, what steps should
employees take? If a site went down, where would data
and records be stored? Its hard to be prepared
to take a direct hit from a Boeing 747. Businesses,
however, should do a blast study a complete structural
analysis of how windows, exterior surfaces and physical
security systems would react to an explosion.
Manager of structures less likely to
be hit can boost their security easily and relatively
inexpensively by applying common sense. If building
managers add guards, they need to be well trained. If
they invest in electronic access and surveillance systems,
they need to be monitored constantly. Even modest measures
can save you. As salesmen say in the home security business:
your security only has to be good enough to convince
a burglar to rob your neighbor rather than you. But
beware: if security cameras are available and not maintained,
this could become a nettlesome issue in a post-attack
lawsuit.
For managers of higher-risk buildings,
security experts advise thinking in terms of three concentric
rings around the property. The outermost circle is the
edge of property or campus. The middle ring is the building
itself. The innermost ring consists of guards and electronic
access points.
Usually, however, the outer ring is
ignored to the peril of the people working nearby.
"Historically, all that security has taken place
in that middle ring," says Mark Oakes, president
and chief executive of Intellimar Inc. of Sykesville,
a manufacturer of bulletproof windows and blast-resistant
doors. "The 11th brought into focus the need to
address the outer ring. The goal is to control access
to the facility."
Experts recommend placing barriers such
as setbacks, from 75 to 100 feet from roadways. Barriers
can range from architectural pre-cast plant-ers to less
aesthetically pleasing jersey barriers. Bollards, or
thick concrete or steel barriers, can be erected to
stop vehicles for a few thousand dollars each. Also
highly recommended are hydraulic vehicle barriers such
as those used around the White House that can quickly
pop up to stop a truck or car, but these can easily
run $120,000 or more.
Another promising new technology is
one that combines video surveillance and facial imaging
technology. With it, software can scan video images
at the pixel level for objects, such as a gun or truck,
or detect situations like a vehicle speeding toward
a building at more than 25 miles per hour. "You
can have so much video information coming in a building.
... Its one thing if you have the Secret Service
sitting there monitoring it. Its another thing
to have people that are less trained," says Dean.
These systems, derived from technology developed by
the entertainment industry, start at around $500,000.
If the least expensive and easiest hardening
is often at the outer ring, the most expensive can be
strengthening the structure itself in the second ring.
Analysis shows that 80 to 85 percent of all injuries
or death from a terrorist blast are from flying glass.
Even small investments to shield employees from glass
injuries can prove the most effective. "If youre
planning to do some renovations anyway and theres
something you can do and its inexpensive, why
not do it ... ?" asks John Strauchs, of Systech
Group Inc. in Reston.
Solutions include adding specialized
window glazing that make windows resistant to bullets
and blasts, steel supports around windows and a blend
of materials from concrete to more absorbent
gypsum walls that would be capable of transferring
a blasts force outward or to another desired direction
to mitigate effects. Even cheaper solutions involve
window glazing or blast curtains that can resist fire
and bomb fragments. "Kevlar" fabric inside
walls can help mitigate damage and injury at a relatively
modest cost.
More sophisticated and much more expensive
blast-resistant windows have dramatically proven their
worth. Ones in the newly renovated Pentagon were credited
with providing valuable minutes for workers to get to
safety before the building and steel supports collapsed.
But simply adding blast windows is not an easy answer.
For one thing, the Pentagon-type windows cost $10,000
a piece. Adding them may also require expensive building
modifications to the structure. Otherwise, the window
will deflect the blast, but the walls will not be able
to absorb the pressure and will collapse. Many of the
still-visible steel beams added at the Pentagon prevented
the buildings walls from shattering when American
Airlines Flight 77 careened into it at nearly 460 miles
per hour.
Strauchs endorses the use of concrete
and steel plating to reinforce columns and upper slabs.
By doing so, building owners can direct the force from
a potential blast in a way that injures the least number
of people and causes the least damage. In most buildings,
the force of an explosion would naturally go upwards,
but it could do less damage if improvements are added
to force it sideways.
Inside a building, biometrics can add
a higher level of defense in terms of personnel access.
Now that germ warfare is a real threat, some companies
are producing special X-ray machines that can scan mail
for bombs or use infrared rays to kill any anthrax spores
in letters or packages.
In recent years, structural engineers,
builders and property managers have benefited from new
studies on how buildings respond to violent actions.
Their data comes from studies of earthquakes and the
1995 bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building.
For example, recent studies show that most buildings
are designed to hold their weight vertically. Instead,
says Strauchs, engineers need to add breathing room,
redirecting forces outward or in a desired direction.
Additional concrete, especially around critical support
columns can make a stiffer building. Steel beams are
fairly elastic and able to absorb a powerful shock.
The World Trade Center proved this at least until
its beams finally melted in the heat generated by thousands
of gallons of burning jet fuel.
Whats more, with the flurry of
studies now underway since the Sept. 11 attacks, theres
certain to be an even deeper body of knowledge on containing
damage from blasts, fires, bullets or biowarfare attacks.
Property managers will have even more security choices
at cheaper prices. Too bad this knowledge is coming
with such a high price tag in terms of human lives.
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- December 2001 |