Construction and tenant improvement cabling
Coordinate low-voltage pathways, telecommunications spaces, copper and fiber cabling, device locations, racks, testing, and closeout with the construction schedule before walls and ceilings close.
Infrastructure scope
New buildings, renovations, and tenant improvements move through rough-in, above-ceiling, wall-close, finish, trim, equipment, testing, and turnover milestones. Cabling work depends on timely decisions about rooms, racks, pathways, sleeves, outlet boxes, access points, cameras, backbone links, furniture, and owner-furnished equipment.
A clear scope separates responsibilities for conduit, tray, sleeves, backboards, grounding, power, firestopping, lifts, permits, security, active equipment, demolition, and closeout. That coordination helps the cabling contractor and the rest of the project team work from the same assumptions.
Plan the physical layer
Current drawings, specifications, addenda, device schedules, milestones, and responsibility matrices help prevent late assumptions from becoming field conflicts.
01
Provide technology, electrical, reflected-ceiling, floor-plan, detail, specification, addendum, alternate, and owner-standard information that affects the cabling scope.
02
Identify submittals, rough-in, pathway completion, above-ceiling work, wall close, device trim, equipment availability, testing, punch, and turnover dates.
03
State who provides pathways, sleeves, boxes, racks, cable, devices, active equipment, lifts, firestopping, permits, access, escorts, and final configuration.
Straightforward project flow
A clear cabling project starts with the building conditions and ends with the agreed documentation.
1
Send the address, drawings, drop list, photos, schedule, and known site restrictions.
2
We review pathways, distances, network spaces, access, construction phase, and active-service constraints.
3
The proposal identifies included cabling, hardware, assumptions, responsibilities, testing, and closeout.
4
Work is coordinated, labeled, tested to the agreed requirement, and closed out with defined records.
Common questions
Plain answers about scope, materials, testing, and project coordination.
Early plan and pathway review is useful before walls and ceilings close. Telecom-room, sleeve, tray, box, furniture, device, and backbone decisions can affect multiple trades.
Floor plans, technology plans, electrical plans, reflected-ceiling plans, telecom-room details, risers, device schedules, specifications, addenda, and alternates can all affect the scope.
Existing cable can be evaluated when both ends, route, category, labels, visible condition, ownership, and test result can be confirmed. The demolition and reuse plan should be explicit.
Closeout may include labels, test reports, cable or port schedules, marked-up plans, as-built drawings, submittals, warranties, training, punch-list response, and spare materials when specified.
Send the current drawing set, specifications, addenda, bid or decision date, construction milestones, project address, and contact for scope questions.
Commercial data cabling, network wiring, structured copper, fiber, racks, testing, cleanup, and construction cabling for Nashville-area facilities.
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Physical cabling infrastructure. Clear scope. Tested handoff.