Dome Cameras
Clean indoor coverage with a discreet, tamper-resistant look.
Best for: offices and corridors
Planned camera coverage, reliable recording, secure remote viewing, and support after handover.
Every camera has a job. We choose the shape, lens, resolution, night performance, and analytics based on what the client needs to monitor, identify, or prove.
Clean indoor coverage with a discreet, tamper-resistant look.
Best for: offices and corridorsVisible directional coverage for outdoor and long-distance views.
Best for: gates and parkingOperator-controlled pan, tilt, and zoom for wide areas.
Best for: yards and large hallsPlate capture for vehicle entrances and controlled lanes.
Best for: vehicle accessHeat-based detection for darkness, fog, and perimeter zones.
Best for: perimeter detectionWide room awareness with fewer blind spots.
Best for: open spacesFlexible links where cabling is difficult or phased.
Best for: remote pointsSmarter detection, alerts, and event search.
Best for: faster review
Modern network-based systems using PoE cameras, switches, NVR or VMS software, secure users, and remote viewing.
Local recording sized for resolution, frame rate, number of cameras, and required retention period.
For larger sites and multi-site operations that need centralized management, user roles, maps, search, and reporting.
Where existing cabling or cameras can still be used, we can plan a practical phased migration instead of forcing a full replacement.
We select brands based on budget, risk level, required features, warranty, availability, and the client environment. We do not force one brand when another is a better fit.
Brand availability and final specification are confirmed during estimation. The important point is matching the camera, lens, recording, storage, network, and support model to the actual site.
A camera system is valuable when it helps people make decisions, review incidents, reduce losses, and operate with confidence.
Continuous or event-based recording with planned retention, playback, export, and storage health checks.
Secure viewing from authorized phones and computers without exposing the system carelessly.
Motion, human/vehicle classification, virtual lines, intrusion zones, and faster event search where supported.
Camera locations, names, views, and blind-spot notes documented so the system is easier to operate and maintain.
Video can support doors, gates, intercoms, and security desks for clearer incident review.
Better camera placement and image quality make footage more useful when something actually happens.
A practical workflow from first visit to long-term maintenance.
The same core discipline, adapted to how each facility actually works.
Cameras for entrances, reception, corridors, IT rooms, storage areas, parking, and sensitive zones.
Coverage for entrances, exits, aisles, cash points, stock rooms, public areas, and parking.
Long-range views, loading docks, inventory aisles, perimeter points, forklifts paths, and outdoor yards.
Documented coverage, controlled user permissions, sensitive zones, and reliable incident review.
Entrances, courtyards, corridors, gathering points, and administrative areas with privacy-aware planning.
Gates, perimeter, parking, shared facilities, intercom points, and secure remote viewing for authorized users.
A focused view of surveillance components only, so the client understands what is included in a real camera project.
| Component | What we define | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Camera type | Dome, bullet, turret, PTZ, fisheye, thermal, LPR, wireless or specialized camera. | The shape and lens affect coverage, appearance, distance, deterrence, and image usefulness. |
| Recording platform | NVR, VMS, hybrid recorder, local storage, or cloud-supported management. | Determines playback speed, user access, retention, expansion, and maintenance. |
| Image quality | Resolution, lens angle, frame rate, night mode, WDR, lighting, and mounting height. | A camera is only useful if the footage can identify the right detail at the right moment. |
| Network and power | PoE switches, camera VLAN, bandwidth, cabling routes, UPS and rack placement. | Stable infrastructure prevents dropouts and makes the system easier to support. |
| Security and access | User roles, passwords, firmware planning, remote access method, and admin control. | Connected cameras must be protected like any other business technology system. |
| Maintenance | Health checks, cleaning, angle adjustments, recording verification, and support response. | Camera systems drift over time; maintenance keeps them reliable when needed. |
Answer a few simple questions and see what Brilla would normally assess first for a surveillance project.
Brilla can visit your site, prepare a practical camera layout, estimate the system, install it, test it, and support it long term.
Brilla Camera Estimator