Physical cabling infrastructure
Plan new permanent cabling, extend an existing system, organize a network room, test installed links, or correct wiring that no longer serves the space.
Infrastructure services
Each page is written for owners, facility teams, property managers, consultants, and construction teams that need clear information about cabling work.
01
Cat6 and Cat6A drops, jacks, panels, pathways, rack termination, labels, and testing.
02
Commercial moves, adds, changes, device wiring, renovations, and facility expansions.
03
Organized copper and fiber infrastructure built around work areas and telecom spaces.
04
Backbone and longer-distance links, enclosures, termination, identification, and testing.
05
Racks, cabinets, patch panels, fiber enclosures, managers, labels, and remediation.
06
Verification or certification matched to the project requirement and tied to usable labels.
07
Tracing, relabeling, patch-cord organization, repair, and authorized legacy-cable removal.
08
Plan-based low-voltage coordination, rough-in, cable installation, testing, punch, and closeout.
Supporting device cabling
These can be included when they support the physical infrastructure scope. Hardware supply, mounting, aiming, configuration, managed Wi-Fi, monitoring, and active network services must be listed separately when applicable.
Permanent cable routes from planned ceiling or wall locations to the rack, with termination, labels, and testing. Wireless surveys and configuration are not the primary offer.
Network cable routes planned around camera locations, distance, pathways, PoE, and the rack or recording location. Confirm hardware and configuration separately.
Permanent cabling for phones, printers, controllers, conference equipment, displays, and other connected endpoints when included in the project scope.
Scope questions
Project details determine which materials, pathways, terminations, tests, and records belong in the proposal.
A single project can combine copper drops, fiber, racks, patch panels, access-point or camera cabling, testing, cleanup, and construction coordination. The proposal separates each scope item and its assumptions.
Yes. Existing wiring should be identified and tested before reuse, while new runs are defined by route, cable type, endpoints, termination, labels, and testing.
The website focuses on physical cabling infrastructure. Active equipment or configuration can be customer-furnished or coordinated separately and should be stated explicitly in the proposal.
Provide the full address, facility type, current drawings, approximate quantities, device locations, network-room photos, construction phase, schedule, work restrictions, testing requirements, and any owner standards.
Share the drawings, drop list, existing conditions, and schedule. We will identify the information needed to price and coordinate the infrastructure.
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.