A stand-alone access control system is working for the wheel-chair bound in London boroughs, an installer reports.
A stand-alone access control system is working for the wheel-chair bound in London boroughs, an installer reports. Colin Lees of QED says that his Essex-based firm has installed the Keysolve device from CW Technologies in properties in Enfield and Haringay, besides student halls and hospitals. In the London boroughs, the system has been integrated with automatic door closers, so that the doors can open automatically inside or out; and with an infra-red device, so that wheelchair users can activate a hand-held device registered by a sensor that opens the door. Colin Lees points out that severely disabled people cannot insert a key into a lock, but can use a token proximity access device, to trigger a door opening, so that they can push the door open with their wheelchair.





