ASSA ABLOY Aperio and Electronic Locks
ASSA ABLOY electronic locking spans wireless and integrated lock families across multiple hardware brands. Selection begins with the complete opening and supported access-control ecosystem.
Treat the opening as one coordinated assembly
Door, frame, lock, reader, credential, hub, access software, egress and fire requirements must be compatible in normal and failure conditions.
Opening and lock-family selection
Survey the door, frame, preparation, handing, thickness, fire label, latch, strike, closer, hinges and existing electrified hardware. Determine whether the opening needs cylindrical, mortise, exit-device, cabinet or other supported locking. Product brand and model must match the physical preparation and required function.
Coordinate fail-safe or fail-secure behavior, free egress, accessibility, emergency release and fire alarm interfaces. A wireless lock still has mechanical and code obligations. High-cycle or critical openings should be evaluated for serviceability, power and the consequence of communication loss.
- Door, frame and hardware condition
- Lock type, function, handing and finish
- Egress, fire and accessibility requirements
- Traffic, criticality and service access
Aperio hub and wireless topology
Aperio deployment uses supported hubs to connect wireless openings to compatible access-control platforms. Hub capacity, range and topology depend on product generation, region and integration. Perform a site survey and record each lock-to-hub relationship rather than placing hubs from floor-plan distance alone.
Metal construction, shafts, elevators, equipment and later tenant work can affect communication. Coordinate hub power, controller wiring or network relationships and enclosure access. Validate communication with doors closed and the building in normal operating condition.
- Supported lock, hub and integration combination
- Surveyed communication path
- Hub power, cabling and physical security
- Post-installation signal and event validation
| Approach | Advantage | Planning emphasis |
|---|---|---|
| Aperio wireless opening | Extends access control with reduced door wiring | Hub survey, battery and integration support |
| Integrated wired lock | Combines reader, lock and monitoring at opening | Cable, power and controller compatibility |
| Traditional separate devices | Flexible component selection and service | More field wiring and coordination |
| Mechanical-only opening | Simple operation for appropriate spaces | Key control and lack of electronic audit |
Credentials, platform and offline behavior
Confirm supported credential technologies and encryption with the exact lock and access-control integration. Plan enrollment, mobile provisioning where applicable, key management, card migration and expiration. Avoid selecting a lock solely because it reads an existing badge if that perpetuates weak credential technology.
Document which access decisions remain local during hub, controller, server or network interruption. Define how quickly credential changes propagate and how events are buffered or retrieved. Feature support can differ by access platform, so obtain a current integration matrix.
- Credential technology and key management
- Access-platform integration and license
- Offline access and event behavior
- Update timing and audit collection
Commissioning and lifecycle support
Test granted, denied, schedule, expiration, door status, communication loss, battery alert and emergency conditions. Verify the mechanical latch and closer operation before interpreting electronic faults. Record any opening that needs corrective carpentry or hardware work.
Deliver an opening schedule with lock and hub serials, firmware, credentials, platform association, battery type and support source. Establish preventive battery replacement and firmware review. Use official ASSA ABLOY and access-platform resources; do not publicly host firmware or integration packages.
- Door, credential and alarm scenarios
- Communication and power-failure tests
- Battery and mechanical maintenance plan
- Protected configuration and asset records
How we plan and deliver the work
The final design depends on site conditions, existing systems, client policies and the selected manufacturer or platform.
Survey the opening
Confirm door, frame, hardware, function and compliance conditions.
Validate ecosystem
Select lock, hub, credential and supported access integration.
Install and test
Commission mechanics, wireless, access decisions, alerts and failures.
Document lifecycle
Transfer asset, battery, firmware and maintenance records.
Information to gather before design
Good decisions are easier when the project team starts with complete operational and technical information. The following items help reduce assumptions, change orders and avoidable return visits.
- Opening type, preparation and code requirements
- Lock family, function and finish
- Hub topology and communication survey
- Credential and access-platform compatibility
- Battery, firmware and service ownership
Frequently asked questions
These are common planning questions. A site-specific answer should be confirmed during discovery and design.
Does Aperio work with every access-control system?
No. Confirm the exact lock, hub, interface, access platform, software version and supported features.
Does wireless mean no cabling is needed anywhere?
No. Hubs, controllers, servers and network equipment still require power and communications.
Can a wireless lock be used on any door?
No. Door preparation, function, fire rating, egress, traffic and environmental needs determine suitability.
Should firmware files be downloaded from reseller pages?
Use official ASSA ABLOY or approved platform resources and verify compatibility before applying updates.
Manufacturer software, firmware and technical files remain on the manufacturer’s official website. We do not mirror firmware files locally.
Discuss a commercial security project
Tell us about the doors, buildings, users, existing equipment, operational requirements and desired completion date. We will help organize the right discovery and design conversation.