2026.01.07

University of Kentucky Adds Total Surveillance Coverage with Hanwha Vision Cameras

At a glance

  • Challenge
    The university needed to replace 60 fragmented analog systems with a unified network to secure 60,000 people across its campus, stadium, and statewide healthcare facilities.
  • Solution
    UK upgraded its campus-wide infrastructure to a 5,000-camera network featuring Hanwha Vision’s advanced multi-sensor, 8K, and edge-based analytic models.
  • Result
    University police and security teams noted faster and more effective incident review and response capabilities, more efficient coverage of multiple areas using multi-sensor cameras, data-gathering with onboard camera analytics, and streamlined communications with local law enforcement.

“Now we’re nearly 90, plus campus police, hospital police, crisis management teams, and a security technology group. But our mission hasn’t changed: provide a safe and secure environment for students, faculty, and staff to learn and work.”

Joseph Monroe
Police Chief of the UK Police and Security Team

Managing the public safety concerns for a major university with an average daily population of roughly 60,000 is challenging enough. Add the needs of an on-site hospital and state-wide healthcare network, and the surveillance requirements can become burdensome, highlighting the importance of the right security infrastructure.

The University of Kentucky (UK) recently completed a campus-wide security system upgrade to Hanwha Vision cameras. The UK police and security team, including Police Chief Joseph Monroe, Deputy Chief Nathan Brown and Security Technology Group leader Stephen Cornett, oversees the surveillance infrastructure, covering security for the University, a major hospital and healthcare system (UK HealthCare, located on-campus and under the police department’s responsibility), and other UK Health hospitals and healthcare facilities across the state.

Monroe described the University of Kentucky Police Department as a growing organization. “When I started 30 years ago, we had 35 officers,” he said. “Now we’re nearly 90, plus campus police, hospital police, crisis management teams, and a security technology group. But our mission hasn’t changed: provide a safe and secure environment for students, faculty, and staff to learn and work.”

UK’s previous surveillance system was a fragmented collection of more than 60 disparate, mostly analog, systems across various colleges and departments. This patchwork resulted in significant gaps in security coverage with no firm foundation for centralization or standardization.

“Investigating an incident meant logging into multiple platforms,” said Brown. “It was slow and inefficient.”

Now, the school’s network boasts nearly 5,000 cameras, including Hanwha Vision’s advanced multi-sensor, 8K, and edge-based analytics models deployed across campus, remote sites, the football stadium, and classroom buildings.

The team also built a new Security Operations Center (SOC) to monitor and manage its new camera network. The SOC also uses the Fusus platform for real-time information sharing with city cameras and the City of Lexington’s Real-Time Crime Center.

“We can respond to incidents faster and more accurately,” Brown said. “We recently received a swatting call (a false report of a dangerous situation) claiming an active shooter in the library. Our operators pulled up live video immediately, saw normal activity, confirmed it was false, and adjusted our response procedures accordingly, still deploying officers but with full situational awareness.”

More Efficient Surveillance Coverage

The University previously used single-sensor cameras, which limited their coverage and also required more labor-intensive configurations.

“We could only cover a small area,” Cornett said. “To get full coverage, we’d need 10-plus cameras, which also meant multiple cable runs, licenses, and mounts. Now, with our new Hanwha Vision multi-sensor cameras, one device, one cable, and one license gives us 360° situational awareness, especially at building corners and hard-to-mount locations. It’s expanded our view dramatically.”

Brown added, “A single-image camera often loses context when a subject moves off-screen. The Hanwha Vision multi-sensor cameras provide 360° wide-area coverage from one unit, eliminating blind spots without relying on an operator. They deliver continuous, comprehensive visibility, critical for tracking incidents from start to finish.”

The University police and security teams can now also share video data with other departments, which has proven useful especially during sporting events and other large gatherings. They use the cameras’ onboard analytics to conduct people counting, object recognition to support operational efficiency, crowd management, and real-time oversight of metal detector lines.

On football gamedays, the University’s population doubles, which means the surveillance challenges increase accordingly. “That requires special event planning, more views of parking lots, and extended coverage beyond the stadium,” Monroe said.

The team installed a Hanwha Vision 4K camera at the stadium, describing the improvements in coverage as a “game-changer.”

“The 8K camera captures the entire footprint,” Cornett said. We can digitally zoom in on any incident and still get high-resolution images. We pair it with surrounding cameras to track suspects, identify perpetrators, and build a complete picture with no blind spots and no missed moments. It ensures patron safety, smooth operations, and the best possible fan experience during games, concerts, and events.”

The UK team plans to add more cameras as their security and surveillance requirements expand. They are confident that the Hanwha Vision camera network can easily scale with their needs, accomplishing their mission of comprehensive public safety and more efficient operations.

Brown said, “We’re giving our community a tangible sense of protection by demonstrating that safety is a priority, every day.”

Hanwha Vision is the leader in global video surveillance with the world's best optical design / manufacturing technology and image processing technology focusing on video surveillance business for 30 years since 1990.