About Access Control Bay Area
One local team that designs, installs, and services access control, cameras, alarms and door hardware across the Bay Area.
One team, the whole system
Access control, cameras and alarms work best when one team designs and installs them together. We handle the full system — and we service what we install.
How we work
We keep it clear: assess your building, recommend a system that fits, install it cleanly, and stand behind it.
- Commercial and residential
- Access control, cameras, alarms and hardware
- One local team for install and service
- A clear assessment before any work
One Team From First Walkthrough to Long-Term Service
Access control is not a product you buy once and forget. The reader on the door, the controller in the closet, the credentials in people's pockets, and the rules that decide who gets in are all parts of one system that has to keep working every day. We handle the whole arc of that system: the site walkthrough where we look at your actual doors and entry points, the install where readers and locks go in, and the service afterward when a credential needs revoking, a schedule needs changing, or a door starts acting up. Because the same local team sees a project through, the person troubleshooting your reader already knows how your building is wired.
That continuity matters most on the small things that pile up. When an employee leaves, you can have their fob shut off so it no longer opens any door. When you add a back entrance or a server room, you want it tied into the same system instead of a second one nobody remembers how to use. Keeping one team across San Francisco, San Jose, Oakland and the wider Bay Area means your security grows the way your business does, in steps, without starting over.
- Site walkthrough: we look at the real doors, frames, power and network you have, not a generic floor plan
- Install: readers, controllers, electronic locks and magnetic locks fitted to how each opening is built
- Ongoing service: add or revoke credentials, change access schedules, and repair hardware as needs shift
- Tie new doors, suites or sites into the system you already run rather than bolting on a separate one
What Shapes an Access Control Job
Two buildings can ask for the same thing and need very different work, because the cost and complexity of access control live in the details of the opening, not the brand on the reader. The kind of door matters: a glass storefront, a heavy fire-rated door, and a standard interior door each call for different locking hardware, whether that is an electric strike, a magnetic lock, or electrified door hardware. Power and network reach matter too, since every controlled door needs a way to get signal and power back to the controller. Knowing these things up front is why we walk the site instead of quoting blind.
How you want to get through the door is the other big factor. A card or key-fob reader is the workhorse for most teams, but some entrances are better served by biometric readers, a keypad code, a mobile credential, or an intercom and visitor-management setup at the front so staff can see and buzz in guests. Many sites mix these, with a fob at the employee entrance and an intercom at the lobby. Pairing access control with security cameras at the same openings also gives you a record of who came and went, not just a list of credentials that were used.
- Door and frame type: storefront glass, fire-rated, exterior, or interior openings each need different locking hardware
- Power and network: every controlled door needs a path back to the controller for signal and power
- Entry method: card and fob readers, biometric, keypad, mobile credentials, or intercom and visitor management
- Single door vs. a multi-door system you manage from one place, with room to add openings later
- Pairing with security cameras at the same doors for a visual record alongside access events
Work with one local team
Tell us what you need secured and we'll walk you through the options.
Call (669) 777-6811