PLENUM BLACK · Division 28 · Long Island
Commercial Security Camera Installers on Long Island
Serving Hempstead, Melville, Hauppauge, Farmingdale, Garden City and every commercial corridor in Long Island.
- IP cameras, PoE-powered
- VMS and NVR platforms
- Retention-based storage sizing
- Remote monitoring readiness
- Coax-to-IP takeovers
- Commercial properties only
The Long Island camera project has a recognizable shape: a standalone commercial building with a parking lot, dock doors and a perimeter that goes dark at 6 p.m. Coverage design starts outside — lot entrances, building corners, dock aprons — with cameras and illumination chosen for actual overnight performance, then works inward to lobbies, cash-handling areas and stock rooms. Our Nassau and Suffolk crews walk the property line before they spec a single camera.
Industrial and distribution users dominate the demand, especially across the Hauppauge park and the warehouse clusters near the LIE interchanges, where shrink at the dock and after-hours lot activity are the problems footage has to solve. But the Island's retail strips, medical offices and auto-related businesses generate steady work too — each with different retention needs, different mounting environments, and different answers on whether the NVR lives on-site or the footage rides to the cloud.
Commercial Security Cameras where you are
Dock operations are where Long Island camera systems earn their money. Distributors and light manufacturers across Suffolk's industrial parks need seamless coverage of every trailer position, driver check-in and staging lane — footage that resolves shortage claims, backs up incident reports and occasionally settles a dispute with a carrier in one email. Our crews design dock coverage from the yard's actual traffic pattern, not from a satellite photo.
Our Long Island partner crews regularly work Hauppauge Innovation Park, Route 110 corridor (Melville–Farmingdale), Garden City / Mineola office and medical corridor and the surrounding commercial areas — so mobilization is measured in days, not weeks.
What the work includes
Camera counts don't equal coverage. A design pass walks your property against the incidents you're actually trying to resolve — vehicle damage claims, dock disputes, slip-and-fall defense, after-hours entry — and places cameras for identification where it matters and situational awareness everywhere else. Pixel density, mounting height, lighting conditions and lens choice all get engineered, because a camera that captures a hooded silhouette at 40 feet resolves nothing and costs the same to install as one that works.
Exterior work gets the same rigor: appropriate housings for New York winters, corrosion-resistant mounting, conduit where cable is exposed, and surge protection on runs that leave the building envelope.
- Fixed dome, bullet, turret and multi-sensor panoramic cameras, matched to each view
- License plate capture at gates and drive lanes, engineered as its own use case
- Low-light and IR planning for lots, docks and perimeters
- PoE infrastructure — switching, cabling and midspans sized with power budget headroom
FAQ
Commercial Security Cameras in Long Island — Questions
Can cameras cover our warehouse yard and dock doors at night?
Yes, if they're specified for it — that means low-light or IR-capable cameras positioned per dock zone, attention to backlight from yard fixtures, and lens choices that keep trailer numbers readable at distance. Overnight yard coverage is a design requirement we test at commissioning, not an assumption.
Do we need permits or approvals to put cameras on our own commercial building on Long Island?
On your own property, camera placement is generally your call, though exterior electrical work and signage rules vary by town and any landlord or park association standards still apply. We flag anything requiring town-level attention during the site walkthrough so nothing surfaces after installation.
What does a commercial camera system cost per camera?
Installed per-camera cost depends on camera class (a multi-sensor panoramic costs several times a fixed turret), mounting conditions (a 30-foot warehouse ceiling or a parking lot pole is a different install than an office soffit), and cable run lengths. System-level costs — recorder, VMS licensing, switching, storage — amortize across the count. We quote from a camera schedule with per-position line items so you can trim or phase intelligently.
How many days of video retention do I need, and what does it take?
Most commercial sites land between 30 and 90 days; the driver is how late incidents surface — injury claims and inventory discrepancies often appear weeks after the fact, and insurers or attorneys may request specific windows. Storage needs scale with camera count, resolution, frame rate and motion levels, so doubling retention doesn't always mean doubling disk. We size storage to your stated retention with documented assumptions, and it's expandable later.
Need cameras in Long Island?
Tell us what you need. A licensed New York crew prices it — free, within 48 hours.