The risk profile of an Auckland commercial property
Most break-ins at Auckland businesses are opportunistic and target one of three things: cash on premises (or perceived cash), portable high-value stock, and tools or equipment. The break point is usually the rear or side door, a low or unsecured window, or a fence/yard line that's easy to climb. The second-largest loss category is internal: shrinkage in retail, untracked staff movements in warehouses, lost or copied keys in shared offices.
A commercial security system is built to do four things at once: deter casual entry attempts, catch deliberate ones on identifiable footage, alert someone fast enough to matter, and limit who can be where after-hours. The right combination of CCTV, intruder alarm, and access control depends on what's at stake on your specific site — not on a generic "small / medium / large" pricing tier.
How we design a commercial system
Comsys works through every commercial brief in the same order: free site visit, written design, agreed scope, install, commissioning record, and ongoing support. The first visit looks at building shell, after-hours risk, the cash-handling and stock layout if relevant, existing cabling and IT infrastructure, and any insurance or landlord conditions on the site. From there we recommend specific equipment by brand and model, not "leading manufacturers" — typically a combination of:
- CCTV — IP HD/4K cameras from Hikvision, Dahua, Uniview, or Axis on an NVR with at least 31 days of retention to satisfy the Privacy Act 2020 default and most insurer expectations.
- Access control — Paxton Net2, HID Signo, or ZKTeco readers on entry, staff-only doors, and server rooms, with revocable mobile or card credentials and an audit log.
- Intruder alarm — Paradox, Ajax, Inner Range, or DSC panels, dual-tech sensors, glass-break, and external sirens. Optional connection to a third-party NZ monitoring station.
- Intercom & visitor management — 2N, Aiphone, or Comelit for after-hours deliveries and gated yards.
The four sub-systems are integrated where it adds value — for example, alarm-arm tied to last-out access event, or CCTV bookmarks pinned to access denials — rather than integrated for the sake of it.
Camera placement for commercial properties
The single biggest cause of useless CCTV footage is bad camera choice or placement, not bad cameras. A camera mounted four metres up looking down a 25-metre aisle gives you wide coverage and unidentifiable faces. The fix is a layered design:
- Identification camera at every door used by people — mounted at face height, narrow lens, capturing a clean shot of anyone entering or leaving.
- Overview camera covering each work area, yard, or sales floor, with enough resolution that you can zoom in on the recorded footage and still read shapes.
- Number-plate camera at the gate or main vehicle entry if your site receives deliveries or has a yard. Use a dedicated ANPR-grade lens, not a general-purpose camera.
- Cash-handling camera directly above the till or counter, with a clear timestamp overlay.
- Perimeter cameras with low-light technology (Hikvision ColorVu / Dahua Full-Color) for after-hours coverage of fences, loading docks, and sheds.
Compliance and insurance considerations
Three pieces of legislation shape commercial security in New Zealand:
- Privacy Act 2020 — CCTV must have a clear purpose, be visibly signed where appropriate, and footage must be kept no longer than necessary. The Office of the Privacy Commissioner's published guidance treats around 30 days as a sensible default for most general workplaces; longer retention is fine if you can justify it.
- Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 — lone workers, after-hours staff, and any panic-button or duress configuration sit under your overall H&S obligations. CCTV positioned over staff workstations needs careful framing (purpose, signage, consultation).
- AS/NZS 2201 alarm standard — the standard most NZ insurers expect intruder alarms to be installed against. Comsys provides a written commissioning record on every alarm install you can hand straight to your broker.
Most commercial insurers will ask three things at renewal: who installed the alarm, when it was last tested, and whether it reports to a monitoring station. A documented Comsys install gives you clean answers to all three.
What a typical Auckland commercial install looks like
For a 250–400 m² office tenancy in the central isthmus — for example a marketing or professional-services firm in Newmarket or Mt Eden — the standard scope is roughly: 4–6 IP cameras (entry ID, reception overview, server-room door, kitchen/breakout, optional carpark or rear access), Paxton Net2 on the main door plus the server room, a small alarm panel with two PIRs and door contacts, and a 4-port NVR with 4 TB. Installation is typically 1–2 days. We document zone numbers, user accounts, and credentials in a written commissioning pack.
For a retail tenancy in a Hurstmere Road or Newmarket strip, swap one of the office cameras for a till-mounted identification camera, add a glass-break sensor to the front, and put the public-area cameras on the front-of-house view rather than the office. For light industrial premises off Highbrook or Penrose, add perimeter low-light cameras, ANPR at the gate, and access control on the warehouse roller door rather than just the pedestrian door.
Commercial security FAQ
How long should we keep CCTV footage?
The Privacy Act 2020 says you should keep footage no longer than necessary for the purpose you collected it for. For general workplace security, around 30 days is the sensible default that most insurers and the Privacy Commissioner's guidance also point to. Sites with higher dispute-risk profiles (retail, hospitality, warehousing) sometimes retain 60–90 days; this should be a documented decision, not an accidental one.
Do you supply equipment, or just install?
Both. Comsys is an authorised reseller for the major brands installed by professional integrators in NZ, including Hikvision, Dahua, Axis, Paxton, HID, and Aiphone. We supply, install, commission, and maintain. If you've already bought equipment elsewhere we can quote install-only, but we won't take responsibility for hardware we haven't specified.
Can the alarm and CCTV be managed by my facilities team?
Yes. We set up role-based user accounts, document the system in a written handover pack, and train your team on day-to-day operation (arm/disarm, add and revoke users, pull footage, swap a credential). For multi-site businesses we can centralise alarm and access management on one platform.
What if we move premises?
Most of the equipment moves with you. Cameras, NVR, alarm panel, and access readers can be uninstalled, audited, and reinstalled at the new site. Cabling stays behind. We provide a written de-install / re-install scope so the move can be priced honestly rather than rolled into a vague allowance.