May 1, 2004
12:00 PM
The next
time you stop at an ATM machine, think of Genpass Inc., Irving,
Texas, an electronic funds transfer (EFT) processing company that
might be handling the financial transaction.
Established in 2000,
Genpass now operates more than 22,000 ATMs in all 50 states on
behalf of financial institutions, independent sales organizations
and retailers. In addition, Genpass owns the MoneyMaker and Money
Belt EFT networks, installed in many major convenience store chains.
Continuum
system integrates multiple building systems
Genpass's critical network infrastructure must be protected and
operate uninterrupted. The company turned to Andover Controls,
Andover, Mass., and local Andover representative, Entech Sales
and Service, Dallas, to address the security needs and critical
monitoring requirements of their corporate headquarters building.
Genpass's corporate
headquarters occupies 79,000 square feet and employs more than
200 people. Inside, a 9,000-square-foot data center is the lifeline
of the company, serving as the hub of all EFT transaction processing
for its clients. The company's national call center, ATM lab and
command center are also housed there.
An Andover system was
installed in the facility several years before Genpass moved in;
and both Andover and Entech Sales and Service came highly recommended
by building owner, Prentiss Properties. A system upgrade to Andover's
newest product line, Continuum, was a logical choice to meet door
access control and data center monitoring requirements, while
providing accessibility to facility data with a Web-based interface.
“The system allows
me to tie in multiple building functions and reduce my costs,”
says Bill Lacava, Genpass's vice president of enterprise networks.
“In the past, I worked with multiple systems, all with different
front-ends. Now, integrating all our systems together and using
only one front-end is more convenient and allows me to have a
small facilities staff.”
On the security side,
the Andover Continuum system provides card access control for
17 doors. All employees have general access permission, with a
select number of personnel assigned higher-security levels for
access into restricted areas such as the national call center,
ATM lab, command center and the data center. Using the Andover
system, the facilities staff and security guards can monitor the
doors, lock and unlock them as needed and respond to door alarms.
For HVAC, it's imperative
that critical computer systems in the Genpass data center be maintained
in a controlled environment. Temperature and humidity monitoring
ensures that there are no equipment failures to bring down the
network and affect millions of EFT transactions all over the country.
Even slight changes in temperature or humidity must be carefully
monitored.
The Continuum system
ensures that environmental changes do not go unnoticed. Continuum
operators monitor numerous data center systems, including the
HVAC units, power distribution units (PDUs), back-up batteries,
generator and switch for the uninterruptible power supply (UPS)
system, the information distribution system (IDS), which drives
the PCs and phones, and the leak-detection system.
Transparent
critical equipment monitoring
The Continuum system monitors the two SiteLink Liebert air conditioning
units in the data center using a Modbus “XDriver.”
This communications software interface allows Continuum to monitor
third-party equipment to receive critical alarming and point information,
thus eliminating the need for an additional front-end.
Continuum also communicates
via an XDriver to the data center's Fike FM-200 fire suppression
system. FM-200 systems have replaced many of the ozone-depleting
Halon systems since 1994, and are installed in critical applications
such as data centers where water damage from sprinklers must be
avoided. If the FM-200 system were to sound an alarm, the Continuum
system would also sound an audible alarm tone as a graphic screen
would display on multiple workstations with pertinent alarm information.
The Continuum system also sends e-mail and text messages relevant
to the alarm to applicable pagers and cell phones. Continuum operators
click on the alarm screen, where scripted instructions tell them
what course of action to take; i.e., call the fire department,
call the building engineer, call management or go to the fire
panel and silence the alarm. If the issue has not been resolved
after a predetermined amount of time, the FM-200 will discharge
a dry powder into the data center that depletes the oxygen level
to an extent that a fire could not continue to burn.
According to Ben Crowell,
account executive for Entech, this alarm response scenario is
typical. “We designed the entire data center monitoring
system at Genpass so that even if you knew nothing about any of
the equipment, if any device were to go into an ‘alarm/trouble’
state, the Continuum graphical screens quickly and easily direct
you to the proper action you need to take.”
Real-time
alarm monitoring with built-in Web pages
The primary controller that serves as the network manager for
the Continuum system is the NetController. Genpass uses its built-in
Web interface to monitor environmental conditions in the data
center remotely from its PCs. Entech designed custom HTML pages
for Genpass that reside directly in the NetController. Management
can browse via the Internet to the controller's IP address on
the Genpass network and view the Web pages to retrieve building
data and status reports, check alarms and change set points.
“Just recently,”
Lacava notes, “I was paged with a ‘leak detection’
alarm after hours. I brought up the Web page at home, verified
that it was a leak under one of the air conditioning units in
the data center, and notified someone to follow up immediately.”
Web-based
front-end lightens facilities staff's work load
Genpass is using another Web-based product to facilitate employee
access control. A Continuum front-end software package called
web.Client allows the Genpass staff to access employee personnel
records in the system's database using a standard Web browser
and a PC. According to Wendy Hunt, facilities coordinator at Genpass,
web.Client, allows day-to-day security management tasks to be
delegated, such as adding, deleting and editing personnel records;
assigning or denying access privileges; remotely opening and closing
doors; and calling up access history reports. “Now the HR
department can deactivate an employee's access card following
a termination,” Hunt says. “And the security guards
can monitor the door activity and remotely open and close them
from their PCs.”
Since installing the
Continuum system, Lacava reports that Genpass has reduced its
monthly electrical bill by $500 to $1,000 — by being able
to monitor and adjust environmental parameters in its data center.
FOR
THE RECORD
About the companies
For information, circle the Reader Service number (listed below)
or visit securitysolutions.com
Andover Controls
30
Entech Sales and Service 31
If you would
like additional information please contact ElectricEyes at 306-347-0606
or info@electriceyes.com.