Early last year a provincial government office building in Hunan decided it was time to overhaul the way people moved through its main lobby. The existing setup relied heavily on security staff to check credentials at the door — a process that worked, more or less, but created bottlenecks during the 8 a.m. rush and left gaps that were hard to close without adding more personnel.
The building sees a steady mix of civil servants, maintenance crews, delivery personnel, and visitors with appointments. Some days headcount at the entrance tops 2,000. The facilities team wanted a system that could handle all of that without turning the lobby into a choke point.
After talking through the pain points with the building management, a few non-negotiables came into focus. They needed to keep unauthorized visitors from wandering past the lobby — not an unusual ask, but the catch was that the lobby itself had limited floor space. Any physical barrier had to be compact.
They also wanted the new gates to talk to the RFID card system already in use, so employees wouldn't have to carry a second credential. Emergency egress was another hard requirement: if the fire alarm tripped, the barriers had to swing open immediately. And honestly, looks mattered. This was the first thing anyone saw when they walked into a government building — it couldn't feel like a subway station.
Our recommendation landed on a set of speed gate turnstiles built around SUS304 stainless steel cabinets with transparent acrylic swing barriers. Three lanes were arranged across the main lobby entrance, each handling bi-directional traffic so the morning inbound crowd and the evening outbound flow could share the same footprint.
A few things about this particular model that made it the right fit:
Integration with the building's existing access control platform went through a standard Wiegand interface. The card readers they already had mounted at reception stayed right where they were.
We scheduled the physical work over a weekend to avoid disrupting weekday operations. The old stanchions came out Friday evening, cable conduits were laid overnight, and the gate assemblies were bolted down and leveled by Saturday afternoon. By Sunday evening the system was live-tested with a subset of employee badges and Monday morning rolled out to the full workforce.
One thing the building manager mentioned afterward: they appreciated that the transparent barriers didn't close off the lobby visually. With the glass panels in the open position, you can see clear across the entrance hall — important for a government facility where transparency, even literal transparency, reinforces the right impression.
The security desk now handles exceptions rather than checking everyone. Morning peak throughput improved noticeably — what used to be a line snaking into the parking lot at 7:55 now clears in under ten minutes. The access logs give the facilities team a searchable record of every entry and exit, useful beyond security — they now cross-reference badge data with HVAC scheduling to adjust temperature zones by actual occupancy.
The gates have needed one service visit since installation — a routine firmware update. The cabinets still look new after wiping down.
Government facilities sit at an odd intersection of requirements: security has to be tight but the environment can't feel hostile; throughput has to be high during rush periods but the hardware can't dominate the lobby. Speed gates handle these trade-offs better than alternatives — the stainless-and-glass combination reads as professional rather than aggressive, and the fast cycle time keeps lines moving.
This Hunan installation is one of several government-sector deployments we completed in 2024. The speed gate configuration running in this building today processes roughly 1,800 people during a typical weekday, handles emergency scenarios automatically, and hasn't generated a single complaint about the lobby looking "too industrial."
If your organization is planning an access control upgrade — whether for a government facility, corporate headquarters, university campus, or transit hub — we are happy to walk through the site requirements and put together a configuration that fits the space and the budget.
Early last year a provincial government office building in Hunan decided it was time to overhaul the way people moved through its main lobby. The existing setup relied heavily on security staff to check credentials at the door — a process that worked, more or less, but created bottlenecks during the 8 a.m. rush and left gaps that were hard to close without adding more personnel.
The building sees a steady mix of civil servants, maintenance crews, delivery personnel, and visitors with appointments. Some days headcount at the entrance tops 2,000. The facilities team wanted a system that could handle all of that without turning the lobby into a choke point.
After talking through the pain points with the building management, a few non-negotiables came into focus. They needed to keep unauthorized visitors from wandering past the lobby — not an unusual ask, but the catch was that the lobby itself had limited floor space. Any physical barrier had to be compact.
They also wanted the new gates to talk to the RFID card system already in use, so employees wouldn't have to carry a second credential. Emergency egress was another hard requirement: if the fire alarm tripped, the barriers had to swing open immediately. And honestly, looks mattered. This was the first thing anyone saw when they walked into a government building — it couldn't feel like a subway station.
Our recommendation landed on a set of speed gate turnstiles built around SUS304 stainless steel cabinets with transparent acrylic swing barriers. Three lanes were arranged across the main lobby entrance, each handling bi-directional traffic so the morning inbound crowd and the evening outbound flow could share the same footprint.
A few things about this particular model that made it the right fit:
Integration with the building's existing access control platform went through a standard Wiegand interface. The card readers they already had mounted at reception stayed right where they were.
We scheduled the physical work over a weekend to avoid disrupting weekday operations. The old stanchions came out Friday evening, cable conduits were laid overnight, and the gate assemblies were bolted down and leveled by Saturday afternoon. By Sunday evening the system was live-tested with a subset of employee badges and Monday morning rolled out to the full workforce.
One thing the building manager mentioned afterward: they appreciated that the transparent barriers didn't close off the lobby visually. With the glass panels in the open position, you can see clear across the entrance hall — important for a government facility where transparency, even literal transparency, reinforces the right impression.
The security desk now handles exceptions rather than checking everyone. Morning peak throughput improved noticeably — what used to be a line snaking into the parking lot at 7:55 now clears in under ten minutes. The access logs give the facilities team a searchable record of every entry and exit, useful beyond security — they now cross-reference badge data with HVAC scheduling to adjust temperature zones by actual occupancy.
The gates have needed one service visit since installation — a routine firmware update. The cabinets still look new after wiping down.
Government facilities sit at an odd intersection of requirements: security has to be tight but the environment can't feel hostile; throughput has to be high during rush periods but the hardware can't dominate the lobby. Speed gates handle these trade-offs better than alternatives — the stainless-and-glass combination reads as professional rather than aggressive, and the fast cycle time keeps lines moving.
This Hunan installation is one of several government-sector deployments we completed in 2024. The speed gate configuration running in this building today processes roughly 1,800 people during a typical weekday, handles emergency scenarios automatically, and hasn't generated a single complaint about the lobby looking "too industrial."
If your organization is planning an access control upgrade — whether for a government facility, corporate headquarters, university campus, or transit hub — we are happy to walk through the site requirements and put together a configuration that fits the space and the budget.