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29 04, 2021

Product Update: Von Duprin Emergency Secure Lockdown (ESL)

By |2021-04-29T20:58:14-04:00April 29th, 2021|arch, Electrified Hardware, Means of Egress, Panic Hardware, Videos|3 Comments

Several colleges and universities approached Allegion to find a solution for individual lockdown of doors with panic hardware and access control.  For doors with Von Duprin QEL devices, the Emergency Secure Lockdown (ESL) feature is the answer.

22 03, 2021

ASHE Webinar – Open to All

By |2021-03-22T13:48:44-04:00March 22nd, 2021|Accessibility, Doors & Frames, Electrified Hardware, Health Care, Locks & Keys, Means of Egress, School Security|0 Comments

A few weeks ago I posted a recorded class on delayed egress and controlled egress locking systems.  If you'd prefer to listen to that presentation live, I will be conducting the class for the American Society for Health Care Engineering on April 22nd. 

18 03, 2021

FDAI – Why?

By |2021-04-27T12:45:11-04:00March 18th, 2021|arch, FDAI, Fire Doors, hc|2 Comments

As I talk to people about fire door assembly inspection, two sides of the discussion have emerged.  Many understand the increased life safety and fire protection provided by code-compliant fire doors - others think the deficiencies are too overwhelming to address.

15 03, 2021

MIFARE DESFire Encryption Key Options (and more!)

By |2021-03-15T13:24:29-04:00March 15th, 2021|Doors & Frames, Electrified Hardware, Locks & Keys, School Security|0 Comments

Allegion is offering 5 more online training opportunities this week - Friday's Security in 30 session on encryption key options for smart credentials, plus Webinar Wednesday's classes on masterkeying, stairwell doors, K-12 layered security, and hollow metal.

11 03, 2021

Decoded: Corridor Doors in Health Care Occupancies

By |2021-11-30T23:08:57-05:00March 11th, 2021|arch, Articles, Fire Doors, Full Width, hc, Health Care|40 Comments

Past fires in hospitals and nursing homes - and the resulting fatalities - have shaped the codes that we use today.  Although today’s codes do not typically require patient room doors to be fire door assemblies, these doors provide a critical layer of protection for patients.

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