Construction sites can turn your highest-value assets into some of the most risky aspects in data center security. Before permanent defenses and protective protocols can be developed, constructed, and maintained—high-value assets are vulnerable.
Consider these security challenges, and address them for your organization through digital prevention.
Exposure is maximized when construction is not yet a reliable strategy to control access and stop theft, internally or externally. Digital prevention, on the other hand, is a reliable strategy.
Attempting to control access and verify credentials by hand? Manual processes figuratively have only two hands: they cannot scale without scaling labor, complications, and worsening already unreliable records.
Some of the most important security measures are impossible at construction sites and the last to get installed: surveillance CCTV, keyless badge readers, mantraps, etc.
Before those core security measures for data centers—valuable copper, power gear, and server hardware stand at the ready in open yards. Tightening access to the yard is the only reasonable solution since advanced infrastructure comes last.
Even with a perfect circle of protection around your yards, access is access. Insider threats are rampant, and more than 3 out of 4 organizations reported substantial theft in 2024.
Digital delivery records—free of the same physical limitations as construction sites—watch the yard and bring sorely needed control to teams, managers, and executives.
Data center security must do what it does best in the face of ongoing risks. Scheduling and supply chain software can have important security benefits for data centers, whether under construction or in the planning phase.
On a good day, manual checks take 10 minutes or more per truck. Though, without a reliable or visible paper trail, verification is inconsistent, audits are blocked, and screening is not scaling.
Surveillance and documentation, ideally, work hand in hand while preventing the loss of precious assets and high-value technologies.
Integrations from scheduling to video turn a terminal process into a preventable one.
Rather than hunting for evidence, scheduling context sees carriers and cargos pre-screened, checked-in, and fully documented with identity, activity, and footage automatically linked.
Construction theft rarely occurs on-site during working hours. After hours, motion-sensing lights can close that window.
The pace of a recovery investigation largely determines whether data center assets are recoverable. Combining video and schedule logs compresses timelines from days to hours—helping after theft as well.
Executives and managers want and need security technology during construction. But, what effect can scheduling and other systems have on ROI?
From incidents, construction sites can lose anywhere from $500 million to $1B. Theft is also on the rise, doubling losses with incidents rising 40%.
Manual check-in averages 8–12 minutes; digital drops it to 2–3. Faster gates reduce detention costs and protect go-live schedules.
Despite threats, theft, and insiders—leaders take up the responsibility for protecting the equipment and assets under their watchful eyes.
But, how can logistics directors and operations managers ensure construction and data center security doesn't hit the bottom line? Learn the biggest risks, and know what to do.
Operations managers and data center construction directors know that high-value equipment can arrive and sit unprotected for long spans. Eventually, defenses are tailored to its use case—sometimes quickly, but often not.
83% of logistics groups report "inside" theft each year. This worries executives when, statistically, a small number of thefts are ever recovered.
Preventing access limits exposure to contractors, professionals, and passersby who see opportunity when your organization's best-laid protections are still pending.
When infrastructure isn't mature enough to independently protect deliveries and equipment, digital tools put up this defense. By enforcing pre-verification of credentials, physical protections are given time to permanently block threats.
Every delivery record in Opendock is linked to a scheduled appointment, with arrival and departure events automatically captured, time-stamped, and logged in a single system. As vehicles and freight move through your facility, SmartGate documents gate activity with image-based visual evidence — no manual input required.
At the gate level, AI-driven cameras capture trailer numbers, license plates, and timestamps, creating an auditable record of every event. When you need to resolve a dispute, pull client-specific delivery records, or prepare for an audit, Opendock's searchable, integrated logs give you the verified evidence to act quickly and with confidence.
Neither construction nor security will wait for your current systems to catch up to real-time activity or assets delivered and left defenseless.
Protect every delivery by upgrading gate management. Book a demo today.