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ASSA ABLOY secures Auckland War Memorial Museum

Auckland War Memorial Museum has finally retired its mechanical door lock system in favour of the flexible and affordable smart lock system designed by ASSA ABLOY

The customer

Auckland War Memorial Museum stands on the hill known by Māori as Pukekawa and was first built in 1929 in remembrance of those lost in the First World War.

It has grown to house a pre-eminent Māori and Pacific collection, significant natural history resources and major social and military history collections. Today, it is recognised as one of New Zealand’s iconic landmarks and one of our finest heritage buildings.

The challenge

With so many precious artefacts housed inside, the museum needed a more secure, modern door and display case locking system that would be sensitive and appropriate to a significant heritage building.

The solution

The wireless capability of the ABLOY PROTEC2 CLIQ locks provides modern access control for the museum’s existing doors without any need to run power to them. It was the perfect solution to maintain the character of heritage doors, avoid damage to heritage fabric, and avoid the great expense of running wires.

The CLIQ solution has given the museum a level of control far beyond what it had before and in keeping with state-of-the-art museum security global best practice.

Auckland War Memorial Museum has over 170 doors to manage.

Managing over 170 doors with more than 500 metal keys was cumbersome and expensive for Auckland Museum. The legacy fob card and metal key combination wasn’t overly difficult for staff to use, but behind the scenes it was a frustrating manual system for the security team that incurred high annual maintenance costs.

Each member of staff was assigned a set of keys that they were required to secure in a key cabinet each time they left the building. When a key was lost or misplaced, additional security guards had to secure the affected doors while a locksmith installed new lock barrels and replaced the keys. This manual system lacked all the security features and audit trails that a digital system can provide.

“We needed to bring our door security into the twenty-first century,” said the museum’s head of security, Sir Kenneth (Ken) McKenzie. “But we were faced with costs of between $3,500 and $8,000 per heritage door for new electronic locks and swipe card readers. With over 170 doors, the cost was simply out of the question.”

Sir Kenneth (Ken) McKenzie, Auckland War Memorial Museum's head of security.

An affordable wireless, smart locking system

Following an introduction by the museum’s architects, Ken met with the ASSA ABLOY team to view the ABLOY PROTEC2 CLIQ system and evaluate its suitability. Brought about by new technology and the Internet of Things, CLIQ is a connected system of wireless smart locks, operated with batterypowered keys.

ABLOY PROTEC CLIQ

Image supplied

It uses AES encryption for every electronic exchange –– the current gold standard for wireless security and used by institutions such as U.S. government agencies. CLIQ locks don’t need wiring, they can fit into most existing locksets, and can be installed without damage to heritage building fabric.

Used by museums and galleries around the world, CLIQ delivers benefits such as remote management, audit trails, and the ability to easily manage key access for staff, tradespeople, cleaners and other contractors. And at a fraction of the cost of the alternatives, modern door security at Auckland Museum suddenly became affordable.

“It’s difficult and expensive to run wires to heritage doors,” says ASSA ABLOY consultant Neil Summons. “Being wireless, the CLIQ smart locks require no major alterations to existing doors and consequently no damage to heritage fabric. The lock cylinders simply swap out and keys are managed remotely from a central point. The museum team can make instant changes and block a key if its security is questioned.”

Discreet camlock on display cabinet.

Image supplied.

Greater key control and visibility

All keys are numbered and assigned to an individual and activated by their user pin at the start of each work day. Keys automatically switch off a few hours after activation, so if a key is lost or goes missing (unbeknownst to the key holder), it soon expires. And if the key owner reports it missing, it can be blocked straight away.

Key data is relayed to a database for the museum team to track the audit trail of keys and doors accessed in order to manage the building. Doors can be assigned individual security settings – some are set for wider usage while others can be locked down to a few individuals.

To design the full locking strategy and specification, ASSA ABLOY created an inventory of over 500 doors and 600 display cases. The holistic, buildingwide solution allowed the museum to go out to tender for stage one with prevetted locksmiths, with ASSA ABLOY providing ongoing strategic input and technical support for the life of the locks.

ABLOY camlock.

Image supplied.

A successful solution

“The solution meets all expectations,” says Ken. “It is heritage sensitive, gives us remote access control to individual keys and individual doors, and we were able to customise it to fit our HID chip for swipe access. The system has taken our security to a whole new level.

“It’s also a system we are rolling out on the display cases, so we can specify exactly who has access to which cases. Eventually, we’ll only need the one key for each person.

“Staff love it. It’s user-friendly and easier than the old system. Everyone is in the habit of badging in each morning and updating their keys.

“This has been one of the easiest technology projects I’ve been involved in, due directly to the product and project support provided by ASSA ABLOY. They helped us develop a system then designed the architecture for it. And Neil was a pleasure to work with. They came in well under budget, on time, and to our quality expectations.’

CLIQ key operating a door cylinder.

Image supplied.

Product summary

The ABLOY PROTEC2 CLIQ is installed on both front- and backof- house doors throughout Auckland Museum. Stage Two will be installing the same technology on all the display cases. ASSA ABLOY supplies a wide range of security solutions to the museum including Aperio TM , a range of locking solutions, as well as levers, door closers and floor closers. We are very proud to be a security solutions provider to an important New Zealand landmark – the Auckland War Memorial Museum.

For more information about the products used on this project, contact ASSA ABLOY consultant Neil Summons on 027 5035 941 or Neil.Summons@assaabloy.com

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