Appartment Villas Surveillance
When it comes to your family’s security, always trust your gut. But it’s also important to ask yourself some tough questions and play devil’s advocate.
For example, one critically important question to ask yourself is where do you (and your family members) think you need security cameras? Another is to determine what are the most vulnerable spots on your property?
Still more questions to ask are do you have hidden or obscured entrances, windows or doors that would be particularly appealing to burglars? Have you or past owners experienced break-ins before? If so, where?
Point is, you know your home best, so you are uniquely qualified to evaluate how to keep it safe from intrusion.
Here are five spots you should always install a home surveillance camera:
Once you’ve decided on the locations of your cameras, you have to determine whether you’ll install your cameras where thieves can see them,–to serve as a deterrent but where they can be easily broken–or if you should put them out of reach where they may hide from burgling eyes but will always catch the thief on video.
Eyecloud recommends a hybrid method: install your real cameras out of reach (and possibly out of sight), and then place dummy cameras – the kind that look completely authentic, of course – around your property. That way, if a burglar does break one of your cameras, it’ll be an inexpensive dummy – and you’ll have a video of the act too.
Front Door / Main Door CCTV Camera
An estimated 34% of all burglars enter your home through the front door, so you'll definitely want to train one of your surveillance cameras here. To prevent a thief from knocking out your camera, place it at second-floor level, or even in the eves of your house, and train it on the front door. If your home has just one level, consider enclosing your front door camera in mesh wiring to protect it from errant rocks, sticks, or other weapons.
Back / Second Door / Entrance CCTV Camera
Another 22% of home burglars enter through the back door, so you need a camera here, as well (and if you have side doors, they count as back doors for sake of statistics). The bottom line is, arm each entry door with a camera. Again, make the effort to place your camera out of the reach of human hands, or to protect it from projectiles, like rocks or sticks or anything an intruder might hurl at it.
Off-Street Windows Camera
Burglars often enter a home by breaking a rear window. By choosing a window that is not in direct view of the street, they decrease their chance of being caught and buy some privacy to do the dirty deed. Get a jump on them and train a camera on any area of your home with windows that cannot be viewed from the street.
Backyard/Side Gate / Balconies
Crooks love a good backyard or Balconies or Adjoining Terraces, since they're often brimming with expensive lawn & garden machinery, recreational equipment, and kids' toys. Arm your Exits & Entrances with motion-sensor floodlights and a night vision surveillance camera to protect your home and belongings. If your Balconies is fenced in, make sure your camera has a view of the entrance gate (or install a second camera there).
Staircases Camera
Many Staircases have access hatches/doors, or at least small windows that are large enough to crawl through. Place a camera on the stairs leading up from the side / front / rear to your home to record any wayward prowlers who sneak their way into your home via the subterranean route.