This paper assesses the security vulnerabilities and assets of a three-building corporate campus occupied by multiple tenants and proposes a comprehensive layered security action plan to address them. Key vulnerabilities include multiple unmonitored entry points, an unsegregated shared parking area, accessible loading docks, and flood risk due to low elevation. The paper's action plan recommends coordinated physical controls — including controlled access points, biometric entry for sensitive areas, segregated visitor parking, CCTV monitoring, and reinforced loading dock security — alongside information and personnel security measures and a clear evacuation protocol leveraging the campus's proximity to a major highway.
The client is a three-building corporate campus, with indications that each building is occupied and managed by different tenants. Multiple tenants and multiple structures multiply security threats because of the varied points of entry and the absence of a centralized system for monitoring or patrolling the campus. Security infractions become even more likely given that the parking area is shared among all buildings and the fifty visitor spaces are not segregated. Furthermore, loading docks are highly vulnerable to attack or malicious access because they are readily accessible from the parking lot. Being only eight feet above sea level adds the potential for natural disasters such as flooding to threaten the integrity of the campus and the safety of its human and physical assets. Layered security is the best way to overcome this vulnerability because of its use of "multiple components to protect operations on multiple levels" ("Layered Security," n.d., p. 1).
The campus's main asset is its proximity to the interstate highway, which makes it easier for first responders to arrive quickly on the scene. Likewise, proximity to the highway facilitates evacuation procedures in the event of a major crisis.
Layered security will address multiple concerns under one rubric. In this case, layered security would entail a multi-feature action plan focusing on the perimeter and property, the buildings themselves, the parking lots, and the loading docks. Additional security layers will be added to allow for employee evacuation in the event of a natural disaster such as a flood. It is strongly recommended that the campus hire a single security consultant to implement a layered security response, ensuring consistency and coordination across all security layers.
The physical layered security components include consistent door locking mechanisms and controlled access points for each of the three buildings. Sensitive areas at the pharmaceutical company may require biometric entry mechanisms. It is also recommended that the visitors' parking lot be segregated and monitored by human security personnel. A robust system for monitoring both employees and visitors would help the security team identify potential threats and respond accordingly.
"Dock controls, CCTV, flood response, evacuation"
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