Services for community leagues
Your hall deserves technology you can count on when the building is at its busiest. We are a computer and systems engineering partner for Edmonton community leagues and EFCL: bespoke software and integrations, Wi‑Fi built for real crowds, and access and camera systems your volunteers can actually run. Scoped for board bandwidth, with clear scope and pricing before you commit, and documented so the next team picks up without guesswork.
Software engineering
AvailableCustom software and integrations that fit how your league actually operates.
From internal tools to booking/facility integrations, we build software your board will actually adopt: sensible defaults, volunteer-friendly docs, and solutions that scale with your league.
- Custom applications and workflow automation for league operations
- API integrations and data migration for legacy systems
- Ongoing support with clear handoff documentation
Networks and Wi‑Fi
AvailableFast, dependable connectivity that keeps up with your events and your members.
Spotty Wi-Fi frustrates members and renters. We design networks that just work: strong coverage where people gather, secure guest/staff separation, and infrastructure volunteers can manage without specialists.
- Site surveys and phased upgrades sized to your hall and budget
- Secure guest Wi-Fi isolated from league operations
- Plain-language docs for volunteer troubleshooting
Physical security systems
AvailableProtect your facility, your volunteers, and the trust your community places in you.
Community halls face real risks but rarely need enterprise complexity. We implement the right level of access control, cameras, and detection for your building and budget — straightforward setups your volunteers can manage with confidence.
- Access control with easy credential issuance and revocation
- IP cameras: clear, secure footage stored and accessible as needed
- Simple intrusion detection your team can arm, disarm, and monitor
Let's figure out what your league actually needs.
Not every board knows exactly what to ask for yet — that's fine. A short conversation is usually enough to map out where to start and what it would cost.