Critical infrastructure preservation, resilience, and hardening intelligence.Preserve the asset. Protect the mission.
Critical Facilities Need Layered Protection, Not Single-Point Solutions hero image
Threat-Informed Design

Critical Facilities Need Layered Protection, Not Single-Point Solutions

Ballistic materials, access control, standoff, fire response, screening, and continuity planning only work when they are engineered as a system.

Risk signal

Ballistic materials, access control, standoff, fire response, screening, and continuity planning only work when they are engineered as a system.

Preservation 2 treats this as a planning signal, not a claim that every site needs the same solution. The relevant question is whether the consequence of disruption justifies a stronger preservation, hardening, or continuity posture.

Decision frame

Planning questionReason to ask it
What mission or service is interrupted if the asset fails?Consequence sets the protection priority.
Can resilience be improved without a full replacement project?Retrofit options may preserve time, budget, and operations.
Which threats are credible enough to design against?The scope should reflect real exposure, not generic fear.
Who owns the decision after the assessment?Security, engineering, operations, and procurement need a common basis.

Practical actions

  • A hardened wall is not a security program by itself.
  • Layered protection aligns deterrence, delay, detection, response, and recovery.
  • The design process should expose gaps between security expectations and operational reality.
  • Translate the risk finding into a scope that can be engineered, priced, and procured.

Assessment pathway

A useful assessment should identify the asset class, define the consequence of loss, document current protection gaps, and recommend a practical upgrade path. The strongest result is not a longer report. It is a clearer decision.

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