Entry-point review
We evaluate doors, gates, sliders, windows, and other vulnerable openings with an operational lens.
- Physical opening checks
- Hardware and access review
- Prioritized findings
Licensed & insured • South Florida service coverage

Our audit process reviews doors, vulnerable openings, perimeter conditions, and secure-entry workflows to help owners prioritize the right upgrades first.
We evaluate doors, gates, sliders, windows, and other vulnerable openings with an operational lens.
Secure-entry performance is assessed across credentials, keys, and how people move through the property.
Mention the entry points, repeat failures, tenant or staff complaints, and any areas where keys, credentials, or hardware no longer match the way the property is used.
Share the property type, location, and the areas you are most concerned about.
Use this form when you need a structured review of weak openings, perimeter conditions, or access-control friction across the property.
Audit requests work best when they turn uncertainty into a practical review path, especially when the property may have multiple weak points.
Emergency lockouts and failures go to live dispatch, while planned upgrades move into a cleaner scope and consultation path.
We look at doors, gates, windows, access rules, turnover, and the real way people move through the property.
The goal is a practical order of operations, with mechanical, digital, and perimeter work staged around risk and operational impact.
The most valuable audits do not try to solve everything at once. They give you a clear order of operations, highlight where access is weak, and show which upgrade path fits the property best.
The result is not a vague summary. It is a working priority list that can move into dispatch, repair, or a broader service page with better context behind it.
Audit questions usually come from owners and managers who know risk exists but do not want to guess where to start. These answers explain what the review covers, what kind of properties it fits, and how the next step is shaped once the weak points are clear.
No. Audits are useful for homes, estates, offices, and larger portfolios alike.
Yes. The audit is structured to produce a usable priority list rather than a vague summary.
Yes. The assessment is intentionally cross-system so hidden weak points are easier to spot.
Usually yes. A structured review helps confirm which openings deserve attention first so money is not spent in the wrong order.
Yes. Some clients use the audit after a recent failure, while others use it to prioritize upgrades across a larger property or portfolio.