The ASHRAE BACnet Standing Standards Project Committee SSPC-135 formally approved for publication for public review a set of proposals which add Physical Access Control capability to the existing standards for Building Automation and Control. The proposals were submitted by the Life Safety and Security Working Group (LSS-WG), consisting of representatives of both the HVAC and physical security industry from around the globe.
¡°The committee developed these proposals over a four year period to ensure that we addressed the state-of-the-art practices of the security industry while building on the proven BACnet platform for HVAC,¡± states David Ritter, Convener of the LSS-WG, and Access Control Project Manager with Delta Controls, Surrey, BC, Canada. ¡°The Access Door Control object type was voted out of committee last year, and these seven additional proposals complete the scope of the Access Control application.¡±
The LSS-WG was able to focus on developing a comprehensive specification for Access Control applications since complementary elements of a complete system are addressed by other BACnet working groups. For instance, Network Security and Web Services are addressed by industry experts in those areas of expertise. Additionally, the core infrastructure for BACnet interoperable building control systems is already in place and widely deployed in the field worldwide.
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BACnet Object Model (Source: ASHRAE) |
¡°The physical security industry has reached a state of maturity that demands interoperable standards,¡± states Rob Zivney, a member of the LSS-WG and VP Marketing with Hirsch Electronics, a security systems manufacturer. ¡°It is interesting that the first comprehensive Access Control standard to emerge comes from the building controls industry. I know that there are many end users with existing BACnet installations that are excited about the possibility of adding access control to their systems.¡±
The work of the BACnet LSS-WG involved the development of eight proposals. The Access Door object was recently approved and published as Addendum f to BACnet. The other seven proposals are expected to become amendment j to the base standard, once the public review process is complete and the amendments are approved for publication by the ASHRAE Board of Directors and by the American National Standards Institute. The proposals include: Access Door object, Access Point object, Access Zone object, Access User object, Access Credential object, Access Rights object, Authentication Factor Input object, and the Access Event Algorithm. These proposals are posted on the BACnet website (www.bacnet.org).
¡°The traditional physical security industry may not be accustomed to looking towards BACnet for industry standards,¡± continues Zivney. ¡°However, everyone can submit comments on these standards. It is important that the physical security industry does so, as BACnet is already a preeminent international building controls standard.¡±
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