Glasscock Texas ISD Installs Combination of Wireless and Wired Locks Managed by 3xLOGIC infinias Access Control
Customer Company Size
Mid-size Company
Region
- America
Country
- United States
Product
- 3xLOGIC infinias Access Control
- Allegion Wireless Locks
Tech Stack
- Wireless Access Control
- Remote Management
Implementation Scale
- Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
- Customer Satisfaction
Applicable Industries
- Education
Applicable Functions
- Facility Management
Use Cases
- Perimeter Security & Access Control
Services
- System Integration
About The Customer
Glasscock County ISD is a school district located in Garden City, Texas. As of the 2018-2019 school year, it had 304 students. The district maintains multiple buildings, including two campuses that cater to students from pre-K through high school. Other facilities within the district include an agriculture shop, a cafeteria and concessions, two gyms, and a bus depot. The district is led by Superintendent Scott Bicknell, who is committed to enhancing the security of the school's facilities.
The Challenge
Glasscock County ISD, a school district in Garden City, TX, wanted to enhance the security of its campus. The district comprises multiple buildings, including two campuses, an agriculture shop, cafeteria and concessions, two gyms, and a bus depot. The superintendent, Scott Bicknell, was inspired by a nearby school district's system of over 100 doors managed by the infinias system. The challenge was to secure all academic settings across the campus and prevent unauthorized entry during certain times.
The Solution
VGI Technology proposed a three-phase access control installation, using a mix of wireless locks from Allegion and wired locks. The first phase of the project saw 60 exterior doors being fitted with both wireless and wired locks. The second phase involved the installation of over 70 Allegion wireless locks for internal classroom doors, managed by an existing 3xLOGIC infinias access control system. The ongoing third phase will complete the installation of all the wireless locks, bringing the total number of doors under management to 135. The main school building has three outer doors, and all visitors must be buzzed in by intercom. The exterior and interior doors are access card-based, and only staff and teachers are issued cards. The district maintains multiple user groups, each with different access privileges and times. Multiple staff members have the infinias application on their phones and can manage the system remotely at any time, from anywhere.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
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