PLENUM BLACK · Division 28 · New York City
Commercial Security Camera Installers in New York City
Serving Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Bronx, Staten Island and every commercial corridor in New York City.
- IP cameras, PoE-powered
- VMS and NVR platforms
- Retention-based storage sizing
- Remote monitoring readiness
- Coax-to-IP takeovers
- Commercial properties only
Camera projects in New York City are exercises in coverage economics: every entrance, loading dock, stairwell and service corridor is a potential liability scene, and property managers need footage that holds up — timestamped, retained to policy, and sharp enough to identify a face or a license plate at the distance that matters. Our partner crews design NYC systems around those failure points, spec'ing resolution and lens per camera position instead of scattering identical domes and hoping.
Installation in the city brings its own constraints. Exterior cameras on Manhattan and Brooklyn facades may involve landlord approvals and mounting rules; interior runs in older buildings need the same pathway creativity as any NYC cabling job; and multi-tenant properties need camera placement that respects lease lines while still covering common areas. We handle the approvals conversation during scoping and deliver systems on modern VMS platforms your security desk or property team can actually operate.
Commercial Security Cameras where you are
For NYC portfolio owners and property managers, cameras are increasingly a multi-building play: one VMS platform, standardized hardware, and footage from a Chelsea property and a Long Island City property reviewed from the same screen. Our network installs to that standard — consistent mounting, naming and retention across sites — so incident response doesn't depend on remembering which building runs which system.
Our New York City partner crews regularly work Midtown and Hudson Yards office core, Financial District and World Trade Center campus, Downtown Brooklyn and the Brooklyn Navy Yard 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 New York City — Questions
How long should an NYC commercial building retain camera footage?
Thirty days is the common baseline for commercial properties, with some owners and insurers specifying more for entrances and loading docks. Retention is a storage-sizing decision — we calculate it per camera count, resolution and frame rate during design so the NVR or cloud plan actually delivers the days you're promising your insurer.
Can you install cameras in an occupied office building without disrupting tenants?
Yes — that's standard NYC practice. Common-area and exterior work is scheduled through building management, cable runs use after-hours windows where required, and per-floor work is sequenced so no tenant loses elevator lobby or corridor access during business hours.
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 New York City?
Tell us what you need. A licensed New York crew prices it — free, within 48 hours.