The subject matter of the present application is in the field of security lockdown devices and systems of the type used in buildings, including schools and similar institutional settings.
Devices for “locking down” or securing individual rooms against intrusion in institutional settings have become increasingly common due to a greater perceived threat of violence against the resident populations. Schools are a prime example of such institutions, and various methods and devices have been proposed to reliably secure school rooms in response to intruder alerts.
One such device and system is disclosed in U.S. Published App. No. 2014/0306466 to Couturier, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference. A door blocking plate has a pair of strong, spaced pins that mate with floor sockets adjacent the inside face of a door. If the door normally opens inward, the plate prevents the door from being forced inwardly from the outside. If the door normally opens outward, a bracket on the inside face of the door forms a large slot through which the plate is dropped to engage the floor sockets, with a portion of the plate extending above the bracket to prevent the door from being pulled open from the outside. A specialized tool can also be provided to release the installed plate from outside the door.
The present invention is a system and method for allowing outside authorities to manage a lockdown procedure from an external location through a BLE smart lighting grid in a building including multiple rooms with doors providing access to the rooms.
The lockdown system includes smart light fixtures positioned inside and outside at least a plurality of the rooms. At least some of the smart light fixtures are configured to be selectively illuminated in each of a plurality of colors. Room lockdown components are provided in at least some of the plurality of rooms. The room lockdown components are adapted to block or secure the door of the room against opening in a deployed condition thereof.
The smart light fixtures and the room lockdown components are equipped with BLE sensors defining a mesh network. The room lockdown components are each adapted to communicate, via the BLE mesh network, at least whether they are in the deployed condition thereof.
At least one primary communication and control (“PCC”) device disposed in the building is in communication with, and operative to control, at least some of the smart light fixtures via the BLE mesh network.
At least one secondary communication and/or control device may also be disposed in the building in communication with the primary communication and control device so as to receive notifications therefrom.
In one embodiment, an external communication and control device is provided, being disposed at a location remote from the building and in communication with, and operative to control, at least some of the smart light fixtures. The external communication and control device and the primary communication and control device each receive information as to whether the room lockdown components are in the deployed condition thereof. The external communication and control device and the primary communication and control device are each operative to independently effect a change in the color of at least some of the smart light fixtures in the smart lighting grid.
In a particular form, the at least one PCC device comprises a portable smartphone or tablet type portable computer, although it may comprise any portable computing device or system with sufficient memory, processing capacity, mobility, and communication capability to achieve the desired communication and control functions as an intermediary between the external computer and the BLE smart lighting grid.
In a further form, external control of the building lockdown system comprises three communication modes: visual control, wherein the outside authorities adjust visual signals such as lockdown status notifications and escape routes by selectively altering the lighting state of BLE light fixtures throughout the building, and/or by altering visual representations of the building lockdown status on PCC devices in the building; two-way text messaging control through the BLE smart lighting grid, in which multiple authorized PCC devices in the hands of administrators or staff are provided with blanketed general messaging and/or individual, point-to-point messaging for the purposes of notification and/or intelligence gathering; and text to audio control, wherein BLE-equipped light fixtures and room lockdown components are also equipped with audio speakers for relaying audio messages from the outside authorities through the BLE mesh network in the building.
In a preferred form, the at least one PCC device may have varying levels of administrative and control access to and through the system. For example, a PCC device may provide the sole gateway to and from the outside authorities with respect to the BLE mesh network in the building, while secondary communication and/or control devices in the hands of lower-tier personnel in the building may be limited to receiving notifications/instructions, or to two-way communication with the PCC device through the BLE mesh network. Such devices may also have compartmentalized functions, e.g., regular mobile phone or email communication with the outside world, as well as specially programmed, specially authorized emergency communication through the BLE mesh network.
In a further form, the system comprises two-way text to audio devices in at least some of the BLE mesh network components, able to send real-time text to audio through the smart lighting grid via the at least one PCC device to the outside authorities. The two-way audio devices may optionally include shot detection circuitry that, upon activation by the noise of a gunshot, initiates communication back to the outside authorities.
In a further form, the system comprises a method of sending text messages through the BLE mesh network in the building from an external web-based messaging system.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the detailed description below, in light of the accompanying drawings.
The following terms are used herein with the given definitions:
“BLE sensor” will be used herein as shorthand for a BLE (or equivalent) wireless communication module or transceiver device with a sensing and/or signal relaying function, and “BLE” will be used to describe a physical portion of the lockdown system equipped with such a device.
“Building” should be understood to include single buildings as well as multi-building complexes. For simplicity, the example of a school building with classrooms will be referred to throughout. However, it should be understood to include other multi-room buildings where relatively defenseless populations are vulnerable to dangerous intruders, such as, by way of non-limiting example, senior care facilities, hospitals, businesses, and the like.
A “smart room lighting fixture” should be understood to comprehend a lighting fixture that is able to wirelessly receive and transmit short-range signals from and to compatible wireless devices in a building. A “smart lighting grid” should be understood to comprehend a plurality of “smart room lighting fixtures” which are arranged so as to form a network of interconnected fixtures.
Referring first to
Room 20 is shown supplied with the room lockdown system components which, in the illustrated example (see also
Boot 40 in the illustrated example is a plate-like device according to the teachings of U.S. Published App. No. 2014/0306466 to Couturier, referenced above and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, with a pair of strong pins 42 on its lower end for insertion into mating sockets 50 formed in the floor adjacent door 22. However, boot 40 and sockets 50 may take different structural forms for purposes of the system of this disclosure; provided, however, that their function remains equivalent in terms of overall system response—i.e. placing the door-blocking device in a socket or similar door-associated receptacle or receiver serves to positively barricade the door and triggers a “lockdown” signal from an associated BLE sensor.
Room 20 also includes a light switch 60 for turning a room light fixture 70 on and off In the preferred form, at least one light fixture 70 is associated with door 22 inside the room, by being located at or near the door 22. Light fixture 70 is equipped with a BLE sensor B of known, commercially available type that is incorporated, for example, in a driver board of one of the LED light tubes L in known manner, and is part of a “smart” lighting grid 100 formed by other BLE-equipped smart light fixtures 70, 80, and 90 throughout the building.
In the illustrated example, a BLE light fixture 80 is associated with door 22 outside the room 20 in a hallway, and at least one other “distributed” or remote BLE light fixture 90 is associated with the hallway or some other part of the building, such as, for example and not by way of limitation, the principal's office or a main administrative or security office, farther away from room 20. It should be understood that the typical building (e.g., school) will have many rooms 20, each with its own door-associated BLE light fixtures 70, 80, and different hallways, wings, or outbuildings with their own distributed BLE light fixtures 90 in wireless communication with the nearest fixtures 70, 80, and/or 90 to collectively define a wireless network for receiving and conveying signals in the manner herein described.
Lighting grid 100 is able to wirelessly receive and transmit short-range signals from and to compatible wireless devices in the building, starting at one or more light fixtures near the signal source and then relaying the signal(s) to the other BLE fixtures 70, 80, and 90 in grid 100 in known manner. It will be appreciated that the BLE smart light fixtures in the building define in this manner a BLE “mesh”-type network. An LED light tube with inter-fixture and intra-building communication and signal capability for such a system is disclosed in co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 15/689,947 (Thiel) filed Aug. 29, 2017, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference. Another example is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 8,214,084 (Ivey et al.) and titled “Integration of LED Lighting with Building Controls,” the disclosure of which is also incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Still referring to
For example, BLE sensor B2 may be on door 22 as illustrated, or on doorframe 23, coupled to a switch or position sensor 25 associated with the doorframe or door, so that movement of door 22 to the closed position triggers a “closed” signal from the BLE sensor B2 that is relayed to BLE sensor B in light fixture 70 and from there to other smart lighting fixtures in the smart lighting grid 100. Switch or position sensor 25 may comprise a magnetic door switch of common type, mechanically fastened or adhered to the door frame and door.
BLE sensor B3 in boot box 30 may comprise a mechanical switch that is activated by being depressed or released by boot 40 as it is inserted or removed from the box. Audible alarm speaker 35 may be a self-contained, battery-operated alarm activated by sensor B3 when the boot 40 is removed from box 30.
BLE sensor B4 on boot 40 may comprise an accelerometer type sensor activated by movement in any direction. Sensors B3 and B4 act in conjunction to detect activation of the system as a dual failsafe. The boot box sensor B3 and boot sensor B4 preferably operate independently, and do not require coordination with each other to individually initiate a lockdown. Rather, the activation of either is sufficient. The justification for this independence and redundancy is to prevent the situation where an unauthorized individual places an object in the box 30 in order to “fool” the sensor B3 into registering the presence of the boot 40 even after the boot is removed from the box. Manifestly, the accelerometer of sensor B4 on boot 40 cannot be “fooled” in this fashion and will, instead, register movement as boot 40 is withdrawn from box 30 during, or in initiation of, a lockdown.
BLE sensor B5 in one of the floor sockets 50 may comprise a magnetic proximity switch between the boot and the bottom of the floor socket. For example, when a large metal “contact” portion on the boot body nears a sensor portion on the bottom of the floor socket, sensor B5 is activated.
BLE sensor B6 in light switch 60 may comprise a common mechanical light switch activating a magnetic switch (not illustrated) in the wall behind the switch plate.
Referring to
BLE sensor B3 is activated when boot 40 is removed from box 30, for example by mechanically decoupling the boot 40 from sensor B3 on the bottom of the box 30; once the weight of the boot is removed, the switch is released and the system is activated. Sensor B3 may be powered on by its own internal battery, or by a battery in a substation 31 in the box, to send a wireless signal to each of the other state-variable room component sensors B2, B4, B5 and B6 to enable or power them on. Simultaneously, sensor B3 signals sensor B in room light fixture 70 that boot 40 has been removed from box 30.
Once the initial boot-out signal is given by B3 in box 30 (and optionally simultaneously by sensor B4 on boot 40), the room must be locked down from the inside by blocking door 20 with boot 40.
The illustrated system further includes at least one primary communication and control (PCC) Bluetooth (or equivalent) compatible device 120 (e.g., a smartphone, a portable tablet computer, desktop computer, etc.) configured to communicate with at least the BLE sensors in the light fixtures of grid 100. The PCC device 120 is preferably, though not necessarily, carried by a designated person or persons of authority or responsibility in the building, such as security personnel, the school principal, etc. The signal from the BLE sensor on any fixture 70, 80, or 90 in the grid is sufficient to activate an “alert” signal on PCC device 120. For example, and without limitation, display 122 may light up with a visible alert notice, or device 120 may emit a sound or vibration, or all of the above may occur, in response to any change in status of the lockdown components.
PCC device 120 in the illustrated example is a “primary” communication and control device. As mentioned below, the PCC device may in one embodiment provide the sole gateway to and from outside security personnel 320 (e.g., police, firefighters, and/or other first responders and designated generally as “Authorities” in
In comparison, secondary wireless communication and/or control devices 220 in the hands of lower-tier personnel in the building may be limited to receiving notifications/instructions, or to two-way communication with the PCC device through the BLE mesh network. However, the secondary communication and/or control devices 220 may also, in one form of the invention, be adapted to also control the system to at least initiate a lockdown in the same manner as described with respect to the PCC device 120.
The at least one PCC device 120 (it is contemplated that more than one such “primary” communication and control device may be provided in a given building, for purposes of redundancy, to permit faster response time in the event of an intruder, etc.) can also communicate with the secondary wireless communication and/or control devices 220 in building 10, and/or with security personnel 320 outside building 10, in order to alert them to a lockdown situation, to coordinate security responses, etc. These alerts may be performed manually by dialing the phone; or automatically by the PCC device 120 upon receiving a lockdown alert from one of the rooms in the building; or upon the PCC device 120 being used to send a lockdown alert to the rooms in the building. Communication between the PCC 120 and secondary 220 devices may be in conventional wireless network fashion, via the BLE mesh network herein described, or via other conventional means.
PCC device 120 may have a number of pre-entered phone numbers stored in its memory, for example key personnel in the school building 10 with compatible phones (which may be the secondary communication and/or control devices 220) and/or outside security personnel 320 such as, by way of example, police and fire departments. PCC device 120 may be programmed to automatically send a voice, text, email, or similar wireless phone network alert to such personnel and authorities in response to receipt of an initial boot out (or completed lockdown) alert from the first room 20 in which a boot 40 is removed from its box 30. Alternately or additionally, PCC device 120 may be used to manually call, text, etc. the appropriate people inside and/or outside the building and alert them to the situation.
It should be understood that, within the range limits of the BLE sensors and the BLUETOOTH-compatible signal strength of the PCC device 120 communicating with the sensors, the person(s) equipped with a PCC device 120 may be able to receive and trigger lockdown alerts from adjacent exterior grounds associated with the building (e.g., parking lots, security booths, playgrounds, etc.).
Secondary communication and/or control devices 220 may be regular smartphones, tablet computers, etc., having direct, non-BLE wireless communication (mobile phone service, email, etc.) with the primary, PCC, device 120, or they may be secondary devices 220 configured for compartmentalized or dedicated communication with the PCC device 120 and with each other through the BLE smart lighting grid 100. Generally speaking, in the event of a room-initiated lockdown (
More particularly, the boot 40 is pulled from box 30 by a handle, causing sensors B3 and B4 to signal sensor B in fixture 70 of the boot's “out” status, and to also wirelessly enable the other BLE sensors B2, B5, and B6 in the room's system components 22, 40, 50, and 60. This puts system component sensors B2, B5, and B6 in condition to send component state-indicating signals to the smart lighting grid 100 through sensor B in lighting fixture 70 and begins an audible “Lockdown” (or other voice warning or alarm sound) output from speaker 35 and/or the status indicator at the boot storage box 30 location.
Referring again to
Insertion of pins 42 into sockets 50 to block the door is sufficient to complete a locked-down condition for room 20. However, referring to
All other rooms 20 in the building 10, having been notified of the “boot-out” or other lockdown initiating component change in initiating room 20, quickly follow suit in response to the warning color change in their door-associated light fixtures 70 and 80, and also preferably by the audible alarms 35 in their boxes 30, and use the boots in their respective rooms to secure the doors thereof.
Still referring to
Still referring to
Referring next to
Turning next to
In the illustrated example, the at least one PCC device 120 is also provided with a virtual room map 200 of the school building, shown schematically in
After the initial boot-out alert, if the initiating room 20 is locked down within the predetermined time interval by inserting boot 40 in floor sockets 50, the status of all rooms 20 is displayed on screen 122, shaded or colored or otherwise visually marked according to lockdown status. For example, all other rooms 20 can be initially shaded a light or transparent red (shown as “RED” in shaded phantom in
Referring now to
The ongoing progress of the lockdown as displayed on the PCC device 120 allows personnel inside and outside the building to coordinate an effective response. After all rooms 20 are locked down and the threat is cleared, the person controlling the PCC device 120 may then send an “all clear” or “safe” signal to all rooms in the building via device 120 through the lighting grid 100. As shown schematically in
According to the system of the present invention in one embodiment thereof, the outside security personnel 320 in
While it is contemplated in the illustrated embodiment that the external communication and control device 320 is in communication with the lockdown components and smart lighting grid via the PCC device 120, it is also contemplated that such communication may be effected by other conventional means. For instance, and without limitation, it is contemplated that the smart lighting grid and lockdown components may communicate to a networked (whether locally or via the Internet through a local server) computer which, in turn, is also in communication with each of the PCC device 120 and the external communication and control device 320.
External control of the building lockdown system via the external communication and control device 320 comprises, according to the exemplary embodiment, three communication modes: (a) visual control, wherein the outside authorities adjust visual signals such as lockdown status notifications and escape routes by selectively altering the lighting state of BLE light fixtures throughout the building, and/or by altering visual representations of the building lockdown status on PCC devices in the building; (b) two-way text messaging control through the BLE smart lighting grid, in which multiple authorized PCC devices in the hands of administrators or staff are provided with blanketed general messaging and/or individual, point-to-point messaging for the purposes of notification and/or intelligence gathering; and (c) text audio control, wherein BLE-equipped light fixtures and room lockdown components are also equipped with audio speakers for relaying text audio messages from the outside authorities through the BLE mesh network in the building.
As will be appreciated, the external communication and control device 320 may, like the other devices 120 and 220 described herein, be a phone, computer, tablet computer, etc.
Turning next to
More specifically,
As shown in
In a “lockdown,” by contrast, one or more distinctive audible or visual indicators of the type described above may be activated in the affected building to advise of the need to take appropriate measures (as agreed upon in advance), including engaging boots 40 to barricade doors 22. As above, such indicators may include audible signals from loudspeakers, from the speaker 35 in each box 30, etc. Indicators may also include the activation of one or more light tubes in the BLE-equipped fixtures 70, 80, 90, etc. Still further indicators may be conveyed to wireless communication devices 220 via the authorities, including, optionally, using the PCC device 120 as a communication hub.
Turning next to
Also in the right-hand portion of the display 410 is provided a lockdown-device status-tracker display 414 which functions to provide a textual, time-stamped entry showing the current status, and subsequent status changes in, all smart light fixtures 70, 80, 90, etc. and room lockdown components 30, 40, etc. in the building.
Also in the right-hand portion of the display 410 is provided a text-and-voice notification display 415. Authorities or other personnel in control of the external communications and control device 320 can send text messages to all or selected ones of the PCC and/or secondary communication and/or control devices 120, 220. This is accomplished from the interface of the external communication and control device 320, which is programmed to be in selective communication via text and/or voice with all such devices 120, 220 in the affected building. Using conventional technology, the BLE mesh network of the smart lighting grid 100 cannot transfer audio from the external communication and control device 320 to any of the PCC or secondary devices 120, 220. Only direct text communication or text-to-voice communication is possible. Accordingly, the devices 120, 220 may be programmed to be able to convert to voice any text messages from the external communication and control device 320.
Turning next to
Outside security personnel can interact with the floor plan 423 by touching (when the display is via a touch-screen type device, such as a smartphone, tablet computer, etc.) or designating via a mouse individual lockdown components (e.g., 425) and/or smart light fixtures (e.g., 424) in order to change their status from green to red and/or lockdown to “all clear.”
While initiation of lockdown via external authorities may be prompted via any known means, including the presence on-site of one or more authorities who report an incident mandating lockdown initiation, it is contemplated in one embodiment of the present invention that the “smart room light fixtures” may be equipped with microphones programmed to detect the occurrence of one or more gunshots and to relay such occurrence, through the smart lighting grid, to the PCC device 120 and the external communication and control device 320. By way of example, any of the display screens heretofore described in
One such shot-detection technology that may be incorporated into the smart light fixtures of the present invention is commercially available through SHOTSPOTTER (Newark, Calif.). In
Optionally, the external communication and control device 320 of the present invention has a “drill” mode. This has all the same functionality as the lockdown mode described above, except all involved persons (both outside authorities and people in the affected building) are aware it is a drill rather than real lockdown. According to the illustrated embodiment, selection of “drill” mode is made at the PCC device 120 by building personnel.
According to one form of the invention where the external communication and control device 320 is operative to control the smart lighting grid 100 in the manner heretofore described, it is contemplated that each at least one PCC device 120 in the building 10 is unable to effect an “all clear” signal except (1) when the system is in “test” mode (i.e., when there is not a real threat in the building) or (2) when authorized by the outside security personnel (such as, for instance via a password or other code provided by the outside security personnel to the person in possession of the PCC device 120). Alternatively, or in addition, the external communication and control device 320 is operative to effect an “all clear” signal. As will be appreciated, the rationale behind optional feature of the inventive system is to avoid the scenario where an intruder or other unauthorized person takes control of a PCC device 120 to effect an improper “all clear” signal.
While the components of the lockdown system are shown above in association with individual room doors, the above examples and the term “room” should be construed to include groups of rooms in the building closed by a common door or set of doors, for example in a wing or hallway accessed and secured by a single door or set of doors.
It is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments represent presently preferred examples of how to make and use the invention, but are intended to enable rather than limit the invention. Variations and modifications of the illustrated examples in the foregoing written specification and drawings may be possible without departing from the scope of the invention.
It should further be understood that to the extent the term “invention” is used in the written specification, it is not to be construed as a limiting term as to number of claimed or disclosed inventions or discoveries or the scope of any such invention or discovery, but as a term which has long been used to describe new and useful improvements in science and the useful arts. The scope of the invention supported by the above disclosure should accordingly be construed within the scope of what it teaches and suggests to those skilled in the art, and within the scope of any claims that the above disclosure supports.
The claims are representative of the invention and are not intended to limit the claimed invention with respect to other features which are supported by or might become apparent from the description, and which might be claimed subsequently.
The present application is a continuation of, and claims the benefit of priority from, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/891,976, filed 8 Feb. 2018, and through which priority is claimed to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/531,649, filed Jul. 12, 2017, and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/456,179, filed Feb. 8, 2017, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 15891976 | Feb 2018 | US |
Child | 16939990 | US |