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Access Control Installation in Liverpool

Access control replaces physical keys with credentials that can be issued and revoked β€” fobs, codes, smartphone passes, intercom-released entry. The right system depends on how many users, how often they change, whether visitors need managed access, and what records the premises need to keep. Survey first, written specification before any equipment is ordered.

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Survey Before Any Equipment Ordered
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Fob/Code Credentials Revoked Instantly
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Intercom Video & Audio Options
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HMO Liverpool LCC Compliant
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Where Access Control Makes Sense

The Situations Where Electronic Access Earns Its Cost

Access control is the right answer when physical keys become unmanageable β€” too many users, too much turnover, or a need for records that physical keys can't provide. These are the strongest cases across Liverpool's property landscape.

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HMO Communal Entrances

The strongest case in Liverpool's rental market. Multiple tenants needing communal access, annual or more frequent turnover, Liverpool City Council HMO licensing requirements for controlled entry. Physical keys copied and distributed across multiple tenancies become uncontrollable. A fob or keypad system allows the communal credential to be changed between tenancies without rekeying the physical lock.

HMO landlord services β†’
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Residential Apartment Blocks

Multi-flat buildings where the main entrance needs to serve all residents and their visitors. Standard solution: video intercom at the main door with electric strike release, fobs for residents and regular users. Visitors buzz the specific flat; the resident sees them on the intercom screen and releases the door remotely. Simple to administer, familiar to residents, low maintenance.

Landlord services β†’
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Small Offices and Commercial Premises

Staff access via fob or code, visitors via intercom. When a staff member leaves, their fob is disabled in 30 seconds β€” no lock change, no key collection. Audit trail shows who entered when. Access schedules restrict entry to business hours. The right system scales from 5 to 50 staff without redesign.

Commercial door repairs β†’
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Care Homes and Supported Housing

Different access levels for care staff, domestic staff, residents, family visitors, and emergency services β€” without issuing everyone a full set of keys. Audit trail satisfying care quality regulation requirements. Residents' dignity preserved by allowing them independent access to their own rooms without complex key management. Liverpool has a growing supported housing sector with consistent demand for this.

Master key alternative β†’
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Schools and Small Institutions

Controlled main entrance during school hours, staff access to offices and restricted areas, evening community use of sports facilities on a separate access profile. Head teacher holds the master credential; caretaker has a maintenance profile; teaching staff have classroom and staff room access; evening clubs have time-restricted entry without needing main keys.

Master key systems β†’
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Workshops and Storage Units

Small businesses and sole traders with valuable equipment or stock need controlled access without the overhead of a full commercial security system. Fob or keypad entry on the workshop door, time-restricted credentials for regular subcontractors, full revocation when someone's arrangement ends. Cost-effective, low-maintenance, and straightforward to administer.

Security upgrades β†’
The credential type determines the whole system β€” get this decision right before specifying anything else. A keypad code is cheapest and simplest but awkward to manage at scale β€” changing the code means informing every user. A proximity fob gives each user an individual credential that can be revoked without affecting others β€” but fobs get lost. A smartphone credential uses the user's own phone as the fob β€” convenient but requires everyone to have the app. An intercom with electric strike needs no credential at all for visitors β€” the occupant makes the decision. Most real installations combine two of these: fobs for regular users and intercom for visitors is the most common combination for HMOs and apartment blocks. The right combination is worked out at the survey visit, not assumed from a product brochure.
Access control installation β€” Cobra Locksmith Services Liverpool
Survey BEFORE SPEC
System Architecture

Four Access Control System Types β€” Which Suits Your Building

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How a Project Runs

From First Conversation to Working System

1

Site Survey and Use Case Conversation

Look at the building in person β€” every door being controlled, existing electrical and network infrastructure, how the building is currently used, how many users, how often credentials need to change, whether visitors need managed access, what records need to be kept. This shapes the specification. A survey that takes 30 minutes prevents a month of return visits.

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Written Specification and Quote

A written document covering every component of the proposed system, the installation method, lead time, cost, and how the system will be administered after handover. Reviewed and approved before any equipment is ordered. Changes at this stage cost nothing. Changes after installation cost parts and labour.

3

Equipment Lead Time

Simple keypad systems can often be installed within a few days. Standalone fob systems typically 3–5 working days. Networked systems with multiple readers and a central controller: 1–3 weeks depending on equipment availability. Lead time confirmed in the specification so the installation date is known upfront.

4

Installation Day

Cabling run, readers and controllers mounted, electric strikes or maglocks fitted to door frames, power connected. For networked systems, controller programmed and all readers connected and tested. For intercom systems, internal handsets installed and paired. Most 1–3 door installations complete in a single working day.

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Programming, Testing, and Handover

Every credential tested against every door it's authorised for β€” and confirmed not to open any door it shouldn't. Access schedules programmed if needed. Full handover: how to add and remove users, how to replace a lost fob, what to do if a reader fails, who to call for support. Written documentation provided. You leave with a system you can administer confidently.

Access control systems need ongoing administration β€” plan for it before installation. Adding and removing users is routine β€” the system is only as useful as it is up to date. Lost fobs need a revocation procedure. Power outages need a defined fail-safe or fail-secure position, and the choice between them is driven by fire safety: a door that locks in a power cut on an escape route is a legal problem. GDPR applies to any system storing entry logs with personal identifiers. Equipment has a service life β€” readers and controllers typically last 5–10 years before component replacement is needed. All of these are discussed at the specification stage, not discovered after installation. The right system is one you can actually administer over its lifetime.
Recent Installations

Recent Access Control Installations Across Liverpool

A selection of recent systems β€” different building types, different credential approaches.

🏠 HMO Fob System

8-room HMO communal entry, Wavertree L15

HMO communal front door β€” standalone fob reader replacing a shared keyed lock. Each tenant issued one fob at move-in. On tenancy end, that fob deactivated in 30 seconds; next tenant issued a new one. Between-tenancy 'rekeying' now takes less than a minute with no locksmith callout needed. Landlord manages credentials via the reader's admin fob.

πŸ“Ή Flat Block Intercom

Video intercom with fob entry, Liverpool L3

12-flat apartment block β€” communal main entrance. Farfisa video intercom with a panel per flat, electric strike on the entrance door. Fobs issued to all residents for direct entry. Delivery and visitor access via the intercom. Postman has a 4-digit code for parcel deliveries. Simple, reliable, and familiar to residents.

πŸ—οΈ Office Networked System

4-door networked fob system, office, Liverpool L1

Small professional services office β€” main entrance, server room, boardroom, and back office. Networked controller with four readers. Each staff member has one fob with individual door permissions. Server room access restricted to IT staff and directors. Audit log confirms who accessed the server room and when. When a staff member left, access revoked company-wide from one screen in under a minute.

πŸ₯ Care Home Upgrade

Multi-level access, care home, Aigburth L17

Residential care home with 22 rooms β€” required audit trail for CQC compliance. Networked system: care staff have all-access fobs, domestic staff have common area access only, residents have their own room and lounge access. Family visitors registered for supervised hours. Emergency services keyswitch at reception. System generates daily access reports for the manager.

⌨️ Workshop Keypad

Keypad entry, workshop unit, Bootle L20

Small engineering workshop β€” owner wanted keyless entry for himself and one regular subcontractor. Keypad fitted to the workshop side door. Two separate codes: owner's permanent code, subcontractor's code changed monthly. Simple, no infrastructure, no fobs to lose. Exactly the right system for the scale and use case.

🏠 Supported Housing

Supported housing block, Kensington L7

11-unit supported housing scheme. Networked system: support workers have all-access fobs, residents have their own flat and communal areas, an emergency override key safe holds a master credential for emergency services. Audit logs meet the support organisation's safeguarding documentation requirements.

Access Control FAQs

Questions About Access Control Installation

Technical and practical questions from building owners, landlords, and facilities managers.

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07749 321303 Full FAQ Page β†’
How long does a simple access control installation take? +
A single-door fob system or keypad β€” typically one day from arrival on site to testing complete. A 2–3 door standalone fob system with cabling: one day. A networked system with 4+ doors and a central controller: 1–2 days installation, plus programming and testing. The specification document produced before installation includes the expected installation timeline.
Can I add access control to an existing door without replacing the whole door? +
Yes in most cases. An electric strike release fits into the door frame alongside the existing lock strike. A magloc mounts on the door head and frame. The door itself, the hinges, and the handle typically stay unchanged. What's added is the reader on the outside, the release mechanism on the frame, and the wiring between them. For most residential and light commercial doors, the existing door is retained.
What happens to the doors in a power cut? +
This is a critical decision made at specification. Fail-safe means the lock releases on power loss β€” the door can be opened without credentials. Required on fire escape routes and final exit doors. Fail-secure means the lock stays locked on power loss β€” the door needs battery backup or a physical key override. Required on high-security doors where you don't want them to open during a power cut. Most installations use battery backup on the controller to maintain function during brief outages, with the fail-safe/fail-secure behaviour only applying on full battery exhaustion.
Can access control integrate with my existing CCTV or alarm system? +
Modern networked access control systems generally have integration options for common CCTV platforms and alarm panels. The specific integration depends on the brands involved β€” discussed at survey. Older standalone or proprietary systems may not integrate. Where integration isn't possible, separate but coordinated systems are the practical outcome.
Do I need to consider GDPR for access control logs? +
Yes if the system stores entry logs linked to identifiable individuals. A system logging 'fob ID 0043 entered main door at 08:47' is processing personal data under GDPR if fob ID 0043 is linked to a named person. A data retention policy for the logs and a privacy notice for system users are recommended. For most small HMO and small commercial systems, this is straightforward to handle with basic documentation.
What's the alternative to electronic access control for an HMO? +
A master key system provides one key for the landlord and restricted individual keys per tenant β€” physical keys that can't be copied without authorisation. Cheaper to install, requires no power or infrastructure, and equally effective for access control purposes. The right choice depends on whether an audit trail is needed (access control provides one; master keys don't) and whether the tenant count and turnover makes electronic revocation valuable. See the master key systems page for the comparison.
Can you supply and install video intercom systems? +
Yes β€” audio and video intercom systems with electric strike release are a common installation for apartment blocks and HMOs across Liverpool. The intercom panel at the main entrance connects to individual handsets in each flat. Residents answer remotely and press a release button to admit visitors. For newer installations, app-based intercoms allow the resident to answer on their smartphone from anywhere.
What support is available after installation? +
Pay-per-call support for occasional queries and programming changes. Annual maintenance agreements for larger systems where regular inspection and software updates are appropriate. Both options are discussed at handover β€” the right level of support depends on whether the customer is self-administering the system or needs ongoing hands-on help.

Need Access Control Specified or Installed?

Initial site visit and conversation β€” written specification before any equipment is ordered.

Access Control Installation Across Liverpool and the North West

Cobra Locksmith Services designs, supplies, and installs access control systems across Liverpool, Merseyside, and Cheshire. Fob entry systems for HMOs in Wavertree, Kensington, and Toxteth. Video intercom systems for apartment blocks across Liverpool city centre and the surrounding suburbs. Networked multi-door systems for offices and small commercial premises. Care home and supported housing access with audit trail capability. Systems specified to Liverpool City Council HMO licensing requirements and fire safety regulations.

All electronic access control installations consider fire safety compliance from the specification stage β€” fail-safe door release on escape routes, panic hardware compatibility, and power backup planning. Where electronic access control isn't warranted, master key systems provide equivalent access management mechanically. For individual property smart access, smart lock installation covers keypad and app-controlled locks. Commercial door hardware is covered on the aluminium door repairs page. All work follows HSE fire safety guidance for exit door and escape route requirements.

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