For any control room — whether it’s for a greenfield festival, a major celebration or ceremonial event, a festival, or a stadium — there are a few key ingredients that bring it all together. Get all of them right and you have a room that’s genuinely capable. Miss one and the others can only compensate so much.
People — and How They’re Positioned
The first ingredient is the right people. Not just having them in the room, but having them positioned to actually work together. Security sitting next to police. Medical sitting next to ambulance. The physical layout of the room should reflect the operational relationships between the agencies in it.
It’s about being able to interact and have those conversations — the quick exchange between the medical coordinator and the ambulance liaison as a situation develops, the security lead and the police officer in the same line of sight when something escalates. That proximity is part of the system. When people have to walk across the room to communicate with a counterpart, or rely entirely on radio and messaging, you lose the informal information flow that keeps situational awareness current.
The Right Built Environment
The second ingredient is the built environment. How the room is designed — sightlines, seating arrangements, shared screens, shared spaces — either supports collaboration or works against it. A room where people can interact easily is a very different operational environment to one where everyone is siloed into their own station with their own screen.
Technology That Creates a Recipe
The third ingredient is the technology — and it’s about how it all comes together rather than what any single piece of it does. Whether that’s CCTV, access control, ticketing solutions, incident management software: individually, each of these provides a partial view. The question is how they come together into one recipe.
When it works well, each agency in the room has the actionable information and insights relevant to their role, as they’re moving through the event. The system creates workflows. It creates a systematic approach to how information is gathered and distributed. And it gives the overall room a coherent picture rather than a collection of parallel feeds that someone has to mentally reconcile.
The Recipe for a Room That Works
People, built environment, technology — none of those three works in isolation. But when all three come together properly, with the right incident management platform as the connective tissue, you have a control room that’s ready to handle whatever the event brings.
That’s the standard worth building to.
Whether you’re setting up a stadium control room or improving an existing setup, the platform you choose makes a significant difference to how the room actually functions. Book a demo with the Chronosoft team to see how their solutions bring the ingredients of a great control room together.