KEYS
TYPES OF KEYS
A key is used to open any lock.
Operation of
Locks
All doors of the guests’ rooms in hotels lock automatically
when we close them. This is designed to offer maximum security. Inside on the
doorknob, there is a small button which enables the guest to double lock the
door from inside for maximum security. When the door is double locked small pin
shows outside, then the hotel staff will not enter the room and treat the guest
room as a DOUBLE LOCKED (D/L) room. Many hotels also have chains inside the
rooms for extra security at night for the guests.
Types of Keys
Metal Keys
The traditional locks which open with metal keys and heavy key
tags are attached to them with hotel name and room no. printed on the tags.
Computerized Key Cards
In the modern days, computerized key cards have replaced
traditional metal keys. These keys are programmed by computers and look like
credit cards and are also known as CARD KEYS. They can
have magnetic strips at the back of the key card, or some
have punched holes which are programmed.
Categories of Keys
a) Guestroom Keys
These keys are issued to the guest by the front office on arrival.
The guestroom keys open a single guestroom but not the double-locked ones.
Normally guest keys have heavy key tags to discourage them from taking it out
of the premises.
b) Master Keys
These keys open the guestrooms that are not double locked and the
four levels are:-
·
Sub Master Keys/Section Keys: These are issued to room attendants,
Valets, Room Service waiters, Minibar Service staff. Usually, the key opens the
door of a section of room on a floor only but not the double-locked ones.
Section means 12-15 room as assigned by management to be maintained by one
chambermaid/room attendant. Chambermaid/room attendant is expected to wear a
gadget (waist belt) around their waist for the safety of the keys.
·
Floor Master Keys: These keys are issued to floor supervisors.
This key opens the entire floor. It enables floor supervisor to supervise all
the room which are not double locked. Floor supervisors will be issued more
than one-floor master key if they are responsible for more than one floor.
·
Pass key/Master key: This is generally issued to Deputy Housekeeper
/Assistant Housekeeper. This key allows access to all the room in all the
floors of a hotel which is not double locked. It enables Assistant Housekeeper
to check any room at any time at random. This key at times can also be issued
to Floor supervisor in case they are responsible for many floors at a time.
·
Grandmaster key: This is the only master key which can open the
room even if it is double locked. Opening a double locked door means
interfering in guest privacy so managements consent is required to use this
key. It can also double lock a room if access has to be denied. Due to the
importance of the key, this is kept only with Executive Housekeeper, General
Manager and Rooms Division Manager and Security Manager.
c) Emergency Key
This key is used very rarely only in emergency situations like
fire, or when an employee is locked in the room. This key opens all the doors
of the hotel which are double locked and can also double lock a room to
restrict access. It is generally kept in hotel safe, or safety deposit box.
d) Supply Keys
These keys are used storerooms, linen room, office where the
cleaning agents and equipments, important documents are stored.
Some other programmed key cards are
e) Power Down or Back up Key
Card
In the event of power
failure or computer maintenance, pre-prepared power down or backup keys are
issued to guests checking-in. These are usually kept in a secure place with the
duty manager.
f) Guest Lockout Key Card
This key may be issued to block a guest’s entrance into a room. A new
key-card will return the lock to normal.
g) Maintenance or One-Shot Key
card
This is like a Guest key
but is issued to a staff, usually someone who is on contract, like a T. V
Engineer. This key will open only one room in which he/she has to enter to do
the work or repairs, and can be used only once.
h) Timer Controlled Key Cards
Apart from the magnetic strip key cards, some hotels use door
locking system, which operate through a clock located within the lock. The key
card is issued for the room at the time of check-in, for the duration of the
guest’s stay, so that the card ceases to be valid at a pre-determined time on
the day of the departure. It can be used in situations like when the guest
doesn’t check-out in their scheduled time without information or when the guest
doesn’t clear / settle his account within their credit limit after reminders
too.
COMPUTERISED KEY CARDS
INTRODUCTION
In the modern days, computerized key cards have replaced
traditional metal keys. These keys are programmed by computers and look like
credit cards and are also known as CARD KEYS. They can have magnetic strips at
the back of the key card, or some have punched holes which are programmed. The
computer codes the cards to lock and unlock the doors. The computer creates new
room lock codes for each room. Batteries with a life of several years power the
microprocessor and card reader, within the lock. When batteries are running
low, an indicator flashes light. The batteries are charged again to operate
normally. Key cards are programmed to operate at a number of access levels. The
access level depends upon the designation of the staff.
Advantages of Computerised Key Cards
·
It provides increased security for guests since metal keys could
be easily duplicated and most of them had the number of the room stamped on
them making it easy for a stolen or lost key to be used for entry but these key
cards do not have any visible indication of what room they open.
·
They also offer more security as it can be programmed differently for
each guest and would also work till the guest departure date is and then would
have to be again programmed by the front desk.
·
Also if by chance the guest carries the room key with him/her or
the key is stolen, the particular room’s lock has to be
changed, as there is always a chance of theft in the room with the old key. The
card system cuts out that danger completely.
·
When a master key is lost, all the locks have to be replaced for
the safety of the guests; but it is extremely costly and practically impossible
to do. A card system allows us to change to code of the locks at our will, and
new cards are issued. This system has become a phenomenon in all-star category
hotels as safety and security plays the most important role in today’s
hospitality industry.
Essential Features of Computerised Key System
In selecting appropriate computerized key card system for a property,
it is important to have:
·
Reliability – so that every time the key
code is changed it works.
·
Speed – for speedier guest check-in.
·
Simplicity – so that every time computer
experts are not required to handle the keys.
·
Control – to limit room access and keep
track of, to whom are the keys issued and who uses them.
·
Easy installation – for cost-effectiveness.
·
Software integration – to connect the hotel system
to the computer.
·
Expansion and upgrading capability –
to always be at par with the latest development.
·
Responsive service and support – to back-up the investment.
KEY CONTROL
Key Control
The control of guestroom keys is one of the
cornerstones of the hotel security that guests have a right to except under
common law. Key control is the process of reducing guest property theft and
other security-related incidents by carefully monitoring and tracking the use
of keys in the hospitality operation. If there is no key-card lock system, the
following policies should be considered for key control:
Coding
A few precautions to take while coding is as
follows:
· Room keys
must not have any form of a tag that identifies the hotel.
· Keys must
not have the room number on them.
· Keys must be identified by a
numeric or alphanumeric code. That code should not, in any way, directly
correspond to the building or room numbers.
Issuing Keys
Apart from the basic precautions for all the
keys, there is more stringent security for keys with higher access.
·
Guestroom Keys: These are the keys with
minimum access, unlocking just the one room. When keys are given to guests upon
registration, the guest’s room no. must not be spoken aloud if there are others
within hearing range. Room Nos. should be shown to the guests in writing with a
reminder that they should note it down if a guest check-in packet is not used.
Explain to the guest that the coding system is their protection. GRA’s and
others who find keys in unoccupied guestrooms or elsewhere should place them in
their pockets or in the locked key boxes provided, not on their carts (where
they are accessible to others), and turn them in to their supervisor to be
returned to the front desk.
·
Master and sub-master keys: All section master keys, room
master keys, grand master keys, and emergency master keys (normally kept in a
safety box) should be signed out each time they are taken and their return
noted in a key control sheet. All the keys should be stamped ‘do not
duplicate’.
Custody of Keys
These are the precautions to be taken while the key is with a
guest or employee after being issued as per the correct procedure.
· Employees should not be allowed to loan the keys assigned to
them to one another.
· Employees should hand over keys whenever they leave the
property, even the meal breaks.
Changing locks and keys:
Whenever a new key is made or a new lock is fitted, certain precautions are necessary.
· A record must be kept of how many keys are made for each room and when they are made. The general
manager must review this record on weekly basis, installing and dating the key-making
log each time she or he reviews it.
· If required as a result of this review, the general manager must instruct the maintenance staff either to
re-key a lock or to exchange room locks around within a housekeeping section.
· If new room codes are to be used or locks are being switched, the code on
the keys must be adjusted accordingly and over stamped until the old code is
illegible and the new code should be stamped nearby if locks are swapped within
a section. As a standard practice, it is recommended that some locks in a
section be moved quarterly.
· A log must be kept of all lock swaps and re-keying.
Loss of Keys:
This is a time when particular vigilance must be exercised.
·
If a section master key is lost under circumstances that may result in a guest being at risk, the
entire section should be re-keyed. If a section is being re-keyed, also
consider re-keying a new grandmaster and emergency key so that, in effect, a
phased re-keying of the entire hotel is accomplished if it has been some time
since this was last done.
·
If a master key or emergency key is lost under any circumstances, it must
be reported to the owner or the corporate office immediately by the general
manager. After the circumstances are discussed, they can decide whether the
entire hotel should be re-keyed.
·
As an additional step, the general manager or somebody he or she
delegates the responsibility to must cross-index all incidents
of theft, missing property, damage, and so on as follow:
a)
Room no. or location. Watch out for locks that have been moved.
b)
Names of potentially implicated employees.
It may be
discovered that room thefts never occur when so-and-so is odd, or
that they occurred, regardless of the room no. when so-and-so was working in
maintenance or housekeeping.Electronic Locks:
These are a precaution in themselves. Since the introduction of the recordable electronic door locks in the late 1970’s, the hotel security has been virtually transformed. The focus at the time of its invention was increased guest security. Now there are countries where hotels that do not feature electronic locking mechanisms in guestrooms will be unable to obtain insurance. Even the simplest of key card locks have been found to reduce break-ins by upto 80 per cent.
Employee key-cards can even be coded to allow access only to their assigned units of responsibility and only during the hours of their shift.
❖ Smart Cards
The future of security, however, lies in smart cards. ‘Smart card’ is a generic term for a card the size and thickness of a credit or debit card that is embedded with a microprocessor chip. The chip itself has ‘intelligence’ by way of computational power similar to that of early personal computers. These powerful computing capabilities make smart cards much more secure than the other types of cards presently in use.
FORMAT OF KEY REGISTER
|
S.No
|
Date
|
Key ID
|
Floor No.
|
Room No.
|
Time of Issue
|
Status at the end of shift(Returned/missing)
|
|
01
| 12/01/2018 | 789456 | Fourth | 401-415 | 07:45 AM | Returned |
SELF ASSESSMENT
Q.1) Explain the types of keys used in hotels
Q.2) Explain the importance of maintaining ‘KEY CONTROL’ to ensure safety of guest.

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