IN WITH THE OLD; IN WITH THE NEW Powerful Video System Gets Gaming OK at Historic Hotel-Casino Renovation
by Russ Gager
March 1, 2007
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The Franklin Hotel,
built in 1903 in Deadwood, S.D., is undergoing a renovation to its original
condition.
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Deadwood, S.D., may be trading in on the notoriety of its
founding through the recent HBO series “Deadwood,” but the South Dakota Gaming
Commission ensures that the days of the Wild West are over in the casinos it
oversees, like the new one at the recently remodeled Franklin Hotel in
Deadwood.
Opened
June 4, 1903, the historic hotel
offered guests amenities that were rare at the time, such as telephones,
running water, radiant heat and electricity in each room. Past guests include
President Theodore Roosevelt, Babe Ruth, Pearl Buck and John Wayne. More recent
guests include members of the Kennedy family, Mary Hart and country singers
Willie Nelson and Big & Rich.
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Off the hotel lobby is a new casino that is safeguarded by a
video system from i3DVR International, Scarborough,
Ontario.
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Restoring the hotel, which has been the center of the town’s
cultural and social life, was the goal of the first phase of the restoration.
To date, the lower and street levels of the hotel have been renovated. This
included installing a state-of-the-art casino complex with eight gaming tables
and 180 gaming devices, of which 172 are slot machines.
Helping to bring law and order to the casino is a security
system that includes the extensive video surveillance required by the state’s
gaming commission. The security company chosen for the project was 5 Star
Audio/Video Systems, Sturgis, S.D.
5 Star has been providing security to casinos and other
properties in the area, such as ski resorts, since the company was founded by
Dennis Roberts in the mid-1980s.
The
first phase of the restoration included 80 video surveillance cameras that are
divided among five servers to provide the required 30 frames-per-second (fps),
real-time video coverage of the tables and guests entering and exiting the
facility.
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Thomas Rensch, general manager of the Franklin
Hotel and Silverado casinos,
inspects multiple views of the hotel’s casino in the security control room.
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“They had to have it back to exactly what it looked like
when it first opened,” Roberts says of the casino. “They will be doing each
floor and going up to the top and redoing each room, but to get it open so they
could start gambling, they had to have those five servers in place and
everything covered and OK’d by the South Dakota Gaming Commission.”
Cat 5e cable with five extra lines was run to each room. The
cable also was run up the elevator shaft to each floor and outside to the front
and rear for the perimeter of the property.
The DVR used in this casino was requested by the customer
because it uses the product at other properties, including The Silverado Casino
located across the street from the Franklin
Hotel. Both the Franklin
Hotel and the Silverado use digital
video recording equipment from i3DVR International, Scarborough,
Ontario, Canada.
Fixed
cameras are used for the floor, slot machines, bar or anything that the
customer or the gaming commission wants covered, Roberts notes. PTZs and
high-resolution cameras are used for detail on the card tables.
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Dome cameras are stationed strategically throughout the
casino.
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“There’s a certain resolution that has to be used, a certain
type of lens, and we put those into a can and have a dome on it,” he relates.
“Depending on the situation, I use different types of cameras. In some
situations I have to use a different type because of quality. In certain gaming
or medical situations, you have to step up into a very expensive, three-chip
camera or something where the picture quality is just exceptional.
“We can run 30 fps to meet gaming standards,” Roberts
relates. “Everything is running at real time.”
The system can grab photo printouts from the video and
archive it at any time, he says.
“Anybody who comes
into the casino, we’re taking pictures of them,” Roberts reveals. “Once you
come through, we have a nice head shot if we ever need it. We’ve used that many
times for the police departments.”
High
picture quality can be obtained from freeze-framing the video, Roberts
maintains. “It’s just like a photo, even
better than the actual shot you see on the screen, because you can manipulate
and lighten and darken it, and get rid of the backlight,” he explains.
Video can be loaded onto an external hard drive. “If police
are brought in, we ask them exactly what they need and supply it for them, so
they can use it in a court of law, and the recordings are watermarked,” he
explains.
Everything is networked in a switching system that the
owners can access from their other casino across the street.
“You can pull it up at the manager’s office,” Roberts
explains. “It’s all in-house; it’s very secure. As far as the casino goes, I
need to have a system that’s very, very secure. We never connect to the
Internet because there are regulations. They don’t permit that.”
One
thing people sometimes forget is the importance of lighting to video picture
quality. “I always like to get together with the people doing the lighting,”
Roberts asserts. “It’s like a movie – it’s 50 percent lighting and 50 percent
video. If the lighting is not done right, you’ll get glare and hot spots. You
can have the best camera in the world, but if it’s fighting the lighting, I’m
not going to guarantee my video.”
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Action at the blackjack tables can be examined in detail
with this camera view
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As a casino project nears completion, the last thing that is
done is the video. “We get all our cabling in, and when everything else is
done, we go in and set up,” Roberts says. “Sometimes it’s a rush, because we
have to cut all the holes and get the tables in place, and then they always
want to open at a certain date.”
But opening is dependent upon successfully passing
inspection of the video and facility by the gaming commission.
“They can spend all that money, but if the gaming inspection
does not pass, they can’t open the doors,” Roberts notes. “We want everybody to
do their thing, but at the end, we know it’s going to be a push, a real push.
It’s always the same because we’re the last ones in.”
Sidebar: On the Job
From i3DVR International, Scarborough,
Ontario, Canada
( www.i3dvr.com)
- 5 servers: SRX-48016A RM SRX E Class i3 series 2.5
TB, RAID box 16 channels rack mount with audio (4), 480 fps RAID 5 array
- 78 fixed cameras: DEC 188 3-axis camera 520 TVL
with a 2.9mm - 10mm varifocal lens 0.05 Lux, AWC, AGC on/off, BLC on/off, 100mm
smoke dome
- 2 PTZ cameras: PQB220 6-in. high- performance
dome, smoked ceiling mount, motorized 22X zoom (digital 10X) 470 pixel, 80
presets
- 8 high-resolution cameras: Z2208 22X optical zoom
color camera, built-in auto-focus and auto iris, highly sensitive, 1/4-inch
CCD, 480 TVL, UTP
- 5 power supplies: i3-24A12-P18, 18 channels, 24
VAC 12A
Sidebar: PROJECTS in the News
SkyTrain pulls into a station located on the Millennium Line
in Burnaby, a suburb of Vancouver,
British Columbia. The 880-camera analog
matrix/ VCR CCTV system on SkyTrain, the world’s largest automated light rapid
transit system, will be upgraded by Indigo Vision, Hoboken,
N.J., to an IP video CCTV system designed
by Indigo Vision’s local partner, Intercon Security Limited, which will
coordinate the installation in partnership with SkyTrain’s own technical team.
All of the original 880 cameras will be reused together with the existing
matrix switching hardware. At each of the 33 stations, the cameras will be
connected to transmitter/receiver units that will convert the analog camera
signal to MPEG-4 digital video for transmission over the local IP network at
each station. Stand-alone NVRs will be installed in each station to provide
advanced recording facilities for each camera stream.
Yeshiva University
recently chose Idesco Corp, a security system integrator based in New
York City, to install the exacqVision Pro hybrid
network digital video recorder system from Exacq Technologies, Indianapolis.
The system will provide analog and IP video surveillance for Yeshiva’s Stern
College for Women facility in
downtown Manhattan. Exacq
Technologies is a manufacturer of IP and hybrid network digital video recording
systems and OEM products for the security industry.
Sidebar: PROJECTS in the News
The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority (CATSA)
selected Labcal’s Be.U Mobile to authenticate employees’ restricted area
identification cards (RAICs). Labcal Technologies Inc., Quebec
City, Quebec, specializes in
fingerprint-based biometrics, smart card and public key cryptography solutions
for identification and authentication. The selection was made by CATSA through
competitive bidding and in-depth technical evaluations by two independent third
parties. The device allows mobile authentication of an individual’s RAIC using
HID’s iCLASS contactless card technology and Bioscrypt’s fingerprint
verification algorithm. The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) has
awarded Johnson Controls Inc., Milwaukee,
a $55 million contract to serve as the technology contractor for the
construction of its $575 million, multi-building Children’s Hospital
of Pittsburgh. Johnson Controls
will be the single point of contact for the installation, integration and commissioning
of all low-voltage network and building systems. The company will work directly
with the hospital and design team to oversee the project from concept through
construction and the commissioning of more than 20 systems on the campus.
Technology systems include a building management system, fire and security,
network, telecom, and data systems. A wireless infrastructure will be
installed to allow the hospital to
operate multiple technologies on a single system.
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