A new app to keep people safe in crowded places will be used at a major London location, after an award of almost £250,000 from the Home Office. The app, called the Krowd, is the first project to be launched publicly under a scheme set up in response to the terror attacks in 2017. The Improving Crowd Resilience competition was launched in July 2017 and forms part of the Government’s efforts to do more with the private sector to encourage them to help tackle the security challenges facing the UK.
It sought to fund innovative projects which would train the public to spot security threats and allow them to report those threats. The app, created by Devon-based developers Krowdthink, allows people in crowded places to speak directly with on-site security teams, allowing visitors to report suspicious activity or potential threats in real-time using their phones. Images are then sent instantly from the crowd and can assist the security team to assess a threat. In the first example of an ICR funded project reaching market, the Krowd App will be used at Broadgate Quarter in central London.
Security Minister, Ben Wallace said: “We are bringing government and industry together to develop tools designed to keep us all safe as we go about our day-to-day lives. I am delighted that this initiative has already started to yield some ground-breaking technologies, like this app, and I look forward to further such innovations. The Krowd App was one of several which shared £1 million funding as part of the Defence and Security Accelerator facilitated ICR programme announced in the weeks following the London Bridge terror attacks.”
Using the app’s venue mapping feature, security staff can locate the perceived threat and rapidly direct staff to the situation. The app can also allow security staff to message the people at a venue directly, guiding them to safety.