Route 22 Industrial Corridor Security Systems in the Lehigh Valley, PA

The Route 22 Industrial Corridor is one of the busiest commercial and industrial routes in the Lehigh Valley, connecting Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Whitehall, Hanover Township, Palmer Township, Forks Township, and nearby logistics areas. Warehouses, distribution centers, manufacturing facilities, offices, healthcare buildings, schools, municipal properties, contractor yards, retail logistics sites, and multi-tenant commercial properties along Route 22 need security systems designed around traffic flow, freight movement, employee access, exterior exposure, and after-hours risk.

Northeast Remote Surveillance and Alarm, LLC designs and installs commercial and industrial security systems for Route 22 corridor properties that need stronger visibility, controlled access, intrusion protection, documentation, monitoring, and long-term system reliability

This page is the main Route 22 corridor security hub. For broader regional planning, visit Lehigh Valley Commercial and Industrial Security Systems.


Route 22 Industrail Corridor Coverave map for Northeast remote Surveillance and Alarm, LLC

Why Route 22 Corridor Security Requires a Different Approach

Route 22 connects major Lehigh Valley commercial and industrial markets while feeding into I-78, Route 33, I-476, and nearby New Jersey access routes. That creates a high-traffic corridor where employees, vendors, contractors, visitors, vehicles, freight, tenants, and service providers may all move through the same property.

Security planning along Route 22 should be based on how each site actually operates. A warehouse, office building, healthcare property, school, manufacturing facility, contractor yard, and logistics site may use similar technology, but they do not have the same risk points.

Route 22 Security System Services

Route 22 Warehouse Security Systems

Warehouses and distribution centers along Route 22 need security systems designed around dock activity, employee entrances, freight movement, inventory areas, trailer-adjacent doors, parking lots, and after-hours exposure. For warehouse-specific planning, visit Route 22 Warehouse Security Systems.

Route 22 Commercial Video Surveillance Systems

Commercial video surveillance systems along Route 22 should focus on usable visibility around entrances, loading areas, parking lots, drive lanes, building exteriors, restricted areas, and after-hours activity zones. For camera coverage and incident-review planning, visit Route 22 Commercial Video Surveillance Systems.

Route 22 Access Control Systems

Access control systems along Route 22 help businesses manage who enters the property, when they enter, and where they are allowed to go. For controlled doors, employee entrances, gates, credentials, audit trails, and restricted-area planning, visit Route 22 Access Control Systems.

Route 22 Intrusion Alarm Systems

Commercial intrusion alarm systems along Route 22 should be designed around unauthorized entry, vulnerable doors, overhead doors, office areas, warehouse interiors, storage rooms, and after-hours activity. For alarm zone planning, video verification, monitoring, and unauthorized-entry protection, visit Route 22 Intrusion Alarm Systems.

Route 22 NFPA Standards for Commercial Security Systems

Security systems along Route 22 should be planned with awareness of low-voltage wiring, emergency egress, access control door hardware, fire alarm coordination, backup power, documentation, and life-safety boundaries. For NFPA-aware corridor planning, visit Route 22 NFPA Standards for Commercial Security Systems.

Key Route 22 Security Areas

Allentown and Whitehall

Allentown and Whitehall properties along Route 22 often include warehouses, commercial buildings, offices, contractor operations, retail support properties, and mixed-use commercial sites. For city-level planning, visit Commercial Security Systems in Allentown, PA.

Bethlehem and Hanover Township

Bethlehem and Hanover Township properties often connect Route 22 traffic with LVIP, warehouse facilities, office properties, industrial buildings, healthcare sites, schools, and airport-area commercial activity. For city-level planning, visit Bethlehem Commercial and Industrial Security Systems.

Easton, Palmer Township, and Forks Township

Easton, Palmer Township, and Forks Township properties often connect Route 22 traffic with Route 33, industrial parks, warehouses, contractor yards, commercial buildings, and logistics activity. For city-level planning, visit Commercial and Industrial Security Systems in Easton, PA.

Common Route 22 Security Failure Points

Route 22 properties often lose control around loading areas, employee entrances, parking lots, exterior doors, restricted rooms, visitor access points, trailer areas, and after-hours activity. These weak points can affect warehouses, manufacturing sites, office buildings, healthcare facilities, schools, municipal properties, and commercial buildings in different ways.

A locked security plan should identify who enters the property, where activity occurs, what needs to be recorded, which areas require controlled access, how alarms should be zoned, and how the business will review incidents when something goes wrong.

Compliance and Life-Safety Awareness Along Route 22

Commercial security systems along Route 22 should be planned with building use, emergency egress, fire alarm coordination, accessibility, low-voltage wiring, workplace safety, documentation, and inspection expectations in mind.

Security systems do not replace code compliance programs, but they can support safer operation, better documentation, access accountability, alarm review, and long-term system serviceability.

For broader code and standards planning, visit Regulatory and Compliance Hub for Commercial Security, Fire Alarm and Life Safety.

Route 22 Corridor Security Assessment

If your warehouse, distribution center, manufacturing site, contractor yard, retail logistics property, office building, healthcare facility, school, municipal property, or industrial facility operates along the Route 22 corridor, Northeast Remote Surveillance and Alarm, LLC can help evaluate the property and design a system around the actual exposure points.

A Route 22 corridor security assessment may review entrances, dock activity, parking areas, employee access, visitor movement, truck traffic, exterior doors, lighting conditions, camera coverage, alarm points, access control needs, monitoring options, compliance-sensitive openings, and future expansion.

To begin site-specific planning, visit Physical Plant Security Assessment or call 1-888-344-3846.


Scroll to Top
1-888-344-3846