Bezemer Industries
Commercial low-voltage guide
Warehouse access control12 min read

Access Control for Warehouses: Doors, Gates, and Credentials

Warehouse access control should be planned around real movement: employees, vendors, drivers, managers, visitors, docks, gates, restricted rooms, shift schedules, and the way credentials need to change over time.

Bezemer Industries branded alarm keypad for warehouse access control

The short answer: access control is an operations system, not just door hardware

A commercial access control system should decide who can enter, where they can go, when they can access the space, and how that access can be changed or revoked. In a warehouse, those decisions affect daily operations. A gate that slows drivers down, a door that frustrates staff, or a credential policy nobody maintains can create more problems than it solves.

The right plan starts with facility movement. Employees, supervisors, vendors, delivery drivers, cleaning crews, maintenance teams, visitors, and managers may all need different access. Some users need access every day. Some need access only during a shift. Some need temporary access. Some should never enter restricted rooms, inventory areas, server rooms, offices, or equipment zones.

User groups before hardware

Schedules before credential rollout

Doors and gates matched to traffic flow

Practical management and serviceability

Begin with doors, gates, and controlled zones

Warehouse buyers should map every controlled opening before selecting products. That includes employee entrances, shipping and receiving doors, offices, dock-adjacent doors, inventory cages, server or network rooms, production areas, exterior gates, vehicle gates, and any restricted zones where accountability matters.

Each opening has a different operational role. A public-facing office door may need a different credential process than a forklift-adjacent warehouse door. A vehicle gate may need coordination with loops, intercoms, cameras, schedules, and emergency access expectations. The system should respect how the warehouse actually functions.

Employee and office entries

Dock and warehouse doors

Exterior and vehicle gates

Restricted rooms and controlled inventory areas

Credentials should reduce key risk without creating daily friction

Physical keys are hard to track, recover, copy-protect, and revoke. Credentials can improve control, but only if the system is easy to manage. The facility should define how credentials are issued, what happens when someone leaves, who approves access changes, and how temporary vendors or contractors are handled.

The goal is not to lock everything down without thought. The goal is to make access easier to manage while improving accountability. A warehouse that changes shifts, vendors, seasonal staff, or driver access needs a credential strategy that can keep up with those changes.

Employee badges, fobs, cards, or mobile options

Temporary vendor access rules

Fast revocation for departing staff

Manager-approved access changes

Door hardware, controllers, power, and cabling have to be coordinated

Access control depends on more than the reader at the door. The project may involve electrified hardware, strikes, maglocks, request-to-exit devices, door position sensors, gate interfaces, controllers, power supplies, batteries, network links, conduit, pathways, and low-voltage cabling. Poor coordination can create unreliable doors or expensive rework.

Commercial buyers should expect the contractor to assess door conditions, hardware compatibility, cable paths, controller locations, power requirements, and service access. If the scope only names readers and credentials, it may be missing the infrastructure that makes the system work.

Hardware compatibility and door condition

Controller and power supply placement

Cabling and pathway planning

Battery backup and service access

Access control and cameras should support each other

Access events become more useful when the facility can pair them with video. If a door is forced, a credential is used after hours, or a gate opens unexpectedly, camera context can help the team understand what happened. The camera and access control plans should be coordinated around the same doors, gates, and controlled areas.

This does not mean every door needs a camera. It means high-value access points should be evaluated as part of a larger security and operations plan. The facility should know which events matter, which cameras support those events, and who will review the information.

Video context for key access points

Door and gate event review

Shared naming for cameras and access points

Manager workflow for incident review

What warehouse buyers should verify before approving access control

Before approving an access control proposal, buyers should verify the controlled openings, user groups, schedules, credential method, door hardware requirements, gate requirements, network needs, power plan, documentation, and training. They should also confirm that life-safety, egress, owner, insurer, and authority requirements are handled by the right responsible parties.

The handoff should include admin users, system naming, credential procedures, device locations, support expectations, and training for the people who will actually manage the system. Access control is not complete when the readers light up. It is complete when the facility can operate the system confidently.

Controlled openings and user groups

Hardware, power, and cabling scope

Credential management process

Training and documentation for facility managers

Buyer questions

Quick answers for commercial buyers.

What warehouse doors should have access control?

Common candidates include employee entries, dock-adjacent doors, offices, inventory rooms, network rooms, controlled production areas, and exterior gates.

Can access control work with vehicle gates?

Yes. Commercial access control can include vehicle gates, credentials, schedules, intercom coordination, cameras, and related low-voltage infrastructure.

Are credentials better than keys for warehouses?

Credentials are often easier to revoke, audit, and manage than physical keys, especially when staff, vendors, or schedules change over time.

Does access control require new cabling?

Often yes. Readers, controllers, door hardware, power supplies, sensors, and gate interfaces may require low-voltage cabling and pathway planning.

Should access control be connected to cameras?

For many commercial sites, yes. Video can add context to door and gate events, especially at high-value or after-hours access points.

Can access control support commercial doors and gates?

Yes. Access control can support doors, gates, schedules, credentials, user groups, cameras, and controlled areas when the hardware and cabling are planned correctly.

Commercial site assessment

Tell Bezemer what your facility needs to protect, connect, or control.

Use this form to start a commercial site assessment for cabling, cameras, access control, monitoring-ready CCTV, fiber, network infrastructure, or commercial security system planning. Bezemer works with commercial and industrial facilities across Clovis, Fresno, and the Central Valley.

Share the facility context, operational priorities, and systems involved so the next step can be scoped around the site instead of a generic equipment list.

Facility walk-through

Doors, gates, yards, docks, offices, racks, camera views, access points, and existing equipment.

Existing infrastructure

Cabling, panels, cameras, network rooms, Wi-Fi, power, labeling, and expansion limits.

Security and access priorities

Who needs access, what needs visibility, where response time matters, and what has to stay protected.

Timeline and coordination

Access windows, active operations, vendor coordination, documentation, and handoff details.

Built with respect for the people who keep facilities running.

Bezemer takes pride in serving commercial teams, public agencies, contractors, and organizations that expect the work to be done carefully, documented clearly, and supported by people who answer the phone.

Veteran-honoring. Locally accountable. Built for real facilities.

Facility Assessment Request

Share the basics of the site, the system involved, and what needs to be fixed, planned, upgraded, or installed. Bezemer will follow up with the next practical step.

Call 559-314-7050
Please do not send passwords, alarm codes, or sensitive facility credentials through this form. Bezemer can coordinate a secure exchange when project details require it.