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Architect choice camera

Tobar, Veronica (2021) In Diploma work IDEL01 20212
Industrial Design
Abstract
In a new modern building or a newly decorated public
space, today’s surveillance cameras can sometimes
be perceived as poorly adapted from an architectural
point of view. For specific cases where e.g. architect,
interior designer, or client must choose a monitoring
solution, it must be possible to offer a more flexible
solution that can be applied in many different rooms and
environments at the same time.

There are many parameters to consider when it comes
to changing a product or when introducing a
new product. This is especially true when developing
a product that is aimed at a niche customer with many
requirements. To provide a good financial return, products
must be manufactured on a large scale, and then
it is required... (More)
In a new modern building or a newly decorated public
space, today’s surveillance cameras can sometimes
be perceived as poorly adapted from an architectural
point of view. For specific cases where e.g. architect,
interior designer, or client must choose a monitoring
solution, it must be possible to offer a more flexible
solution that can be applied in many different rooms and
environments at the same time.

There are many parameters to consider when it comes
to changing a product or when introducing a
new product. This is especially true when developing
a product that is aimed at a niche customer with many
requirements. To provide a good financial return, products
must be manufactured on a large scale, and then
it is required that they work in many different contexts
despite a niche customer base.

By creating concepts for the most common scenarios
where monitoring is needed and finding common requirements,
one can approach a solution that could work
in several different cases. It can be about building in,
building around, or in some way masking the surveillance
camera so that it does not affect the architecture. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Tobar, Veronica
supervisor
organization
course
IDEL01 20212
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
publication/series
Diploma work
report number
ISRN: LUT-DVIDE/EX--21/50567-SE
other publication id
ISRN
language
English
id
9067667
date added to LUP
2021-11-08 15:31:36
date last changed
2021-11-08 15:31:36
@misc{9067667,
  abstract     = {{In a new modern building or a newly decorated public
space, today’s surveillance cameras can sometimes
be perceived as poorly adapted from an architectural
point of view. For specific cases where e.g. architect,
interior designer, or client must choose a monitoring
solution, it must be possible to offer a more flexible
solution that can be applied in many different rooms and
environments at the same time.

There are many parameters to consider when it comes
to changing a product or when introducing a
new product. This is especially true when developing
a product that is aimed at a niche customer with many
requirements. To provide a good financial return, products
must be manufactured on a large scale, and then
it is required that they work in many different contexts
despite a niche customer base.

By creating concepts for the most common scenarios
where monitoring is needed and finding common requirements,
one can approach a solution that could work
in several different cases. It can be about building in,
building around, or in some way masking the surveillance 
camera so that it does not affect the architecture.}},
  author       = {{Tobar, Veronica}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  series       = {{Diploma work}},
  title        = {{Architect choice camera}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}