Skeldor means protection.
Skeldor is rooted in the Old Norse name Skjöldr or Skjǫldr, meaning “shield” or “protection.” The name of legendary Danish kings signifying protector or shield-bearer, a fitting name for a system designed to protect buildings, infrastructure, and people before seismic damage begins.
Protection before the earthquake hits.
Skeldor detects seismic activity in real time and automatically safeguards buildings, systems, and people before damage occurs.
Earthquakes do more than shake structures.
The most serious damage can come from what follows: gas leaks, fires, elevator failures, power disruption, and cascading building-system risks.
- Most systems react after the event has already started.
- Critical seconds are lost when protection depends on human response.
- Buildings need automated protection, not just alerts.
Skeldor acts before damage starts.
Skeldor detects primary seismic waves and triggers automated safety actions before the most destructive shaking arrives.
Early detection
Identifies seismic activity in real time using dedicated sensing technology.
Automatic response
Triggers safety actions such as alerts, gas shutoff, and building-system controls.
Resilient operation
Designed to operate without internet dependency and continue during power loss.
A complete seismic protection system — not just a device.
Skeldor is designed as a layered protection platform for buildings, operators, and safety teams.
Skeldor Sentinel
Real-time seismic detection at the building level.
Skeldor Shield
Automated protective actions for gas, power, elevators, and critical systems.
Skeldor Grid
A networked layer for multi-building and municipal protection.
Skeldor Platform
Monitoring, analytics, reporting, and safety-system management.
Built for buildings where reliability matters.
Skeldor is positioned for serious environments: apartment buildings, schools, hospitals, industrial sites, public buildings, and infrastructure operators.
Trust signals to add as the company scales: test results, certifications, pilot deployments, installation partners, engineering documentation, customer references, and system uptime data.