Code Blue CB9T00042 Emergency Tower Station with Built-in Strobe
When you need a visible, accessible emergency communication point for parking structures, campuses, or facility perimeters, tower stations deliver immediate response capability without complex trenching or conduit runs. The CB9T00042 combines two-way voice communication with an integrated strobe beacon in a weatherproof column that integrates with existing VoIP or analog phone systems, giving you a code-compliant solution that occupants can locate day or night.
Key Features
- Tall tower profile maximizes visibility across parking lots and open areas
- Built-in blue strobe beacon activates on call initiation for visual confirmation and responder wayfinding
- Hands-free full-duplex communication with clear audio in outdoor environments
- 120V AC operation simplifies installation where standard electrical service is available
- Weatherproof construction withstands exposure to rain, temperature extremes, and UV
- ADA-compliant call button placement and audible feedback for accessibility requirements
- Integrates with phone systems, mass notification platforms, or dedicated emergency line
- Vandal-resistant enclosure and hardware designed for unsupervised public spaces
Emergency tower deployments typically face two challenges: making the station obvious enough that people find it under stress, and ensuring responders can quickly identify which unit initiated the call. The integrated strobe addresses both. When someone presses the call button, the beacon activates immediately, giving security or police a clear visual marker even across multi-acre sites. The tower form factor itself provides standoff visibility that wall-mount units can't match, particularly in parking structures where sightlines are interrupted by vehicles and columns.
Installation runs standard 120V AC to the tower location—no need for PoE infrastructure or low-voltage power supplies at each endpoint. The unit connects to your phone system using standard telecom interfaces, either tying into an existing emergency line or routing to a monitoring station. For campuses adding multiple towers, this becomes a straightforward electrical and telecom pull rather than a complex IP endpoint deployment, reducing both material and labor costs while maintaining reliable two-way communication when it matters most.