Panic room in old building Security expert for old building wanted

  • Erstellt am 2018-11-10 13:50:04

haydee

2018-11-10 21:50:39
  • #1
Who knows what the client has experienced. Kidnapping, rape, burglary with physical violence.

I hope the monument protection is not for the interior. A friend of my father has massive problems. Facade, stucco, and a few other things
 

ypg

2018-11-10 22:03:32
  • #2


The attentive reader has noticed that the last thread was already locked... but the assault has also been the focus of various threads for years.
 

chand1986

2018-11-10 22:16:56
  • #3
Just a dumb question: If I want to lock off an upper floor from a lower floor, wouldn't a (high)security door in the stairwell be enough? The ceiling is what it is anyway.

Otherwise: Wouldn't two highly secure panic rooms (one per floor) be easier to implement than turning the entire apartment into a panic room? Also, practically speaking, this way you can avoid significant restrictions in everyday life and still have the bunker available in case of emergency. Seriously meant.
 

haydee

2018-11-10 22:20:25
  • #4
I have noticed.

It does happen, albeit very rarely. I would find it bad if something like that is used for indirect propaganda.
 

Steven

2018-11-10 22:27:18
  • #5
Hello everyone

you are simply overcomplicating things.
The question was about a specialist company, or an expert, who can plan and implement such, I admit, extreme protective measures in a listed building.
Now some are already sniffing out schizophrenia. How do you come up with that narrow-minded idea?
Paranoia, I could still understand that. But this diagnosis is also wrong. It can only be diagnosed by laypeople, and from a distance certainly only if you read many tabloid papers.
It is actually only about the opening thread: security measures in an old house. The rest comes from some wet imagination.

Steven
 

Steven

2018-11-10 22:33:01
  • #6
[QUOTE="chand1986, post: 292068, member: 41942 If I want to lock off an upper floor from a lower one, wouldn't a (high)security door in the stairwell be sufficient? .[/QUOTE]

Hello chand,
that's the crux of the matter. Actually quite simple. But the implementation is not that easy.
The solution you described is intended. But in such a way that the stairwell looks "normal." However, in case of emergency, it can be locked at the push of a button. Or in the evening, when going upstairs to sleep, secured by push of a button and unlocked in the morning. Actually quite simple. But the implementation should be done by a professional. A vault door is not what is desired. Rather a panel that slides down from the ceiling into the stairwell and disappears again in the morning.

Steven
 

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