CAT6 and CAT6A copper
Gigabit and 10-gigabit Ethernet, terminated to spec and certified with a Fluke DTX tester. Every run labeled. Every port mapped.
CAT6, fiber, and structured cabling for NYC buildings. The foundation every other system runs on.
Hardware changes. Software updates. Cameras get swapped. But the cable behind the wall stays.
Pulled wrong, it costs you twice. Cable runs that fail certification. Splices in places nobody can reach. Cheap CAT6 that won’t carry tomorrow’s bandwidth. Most NYC buildings get rewired every five to seven years because the first install cut corners.
Pulled right, you stop thinking about it. We install to TIA/EIA standards. We certify every run. We label every port. The cable behind your walls is ready for whatever you plug into it next.
Gigabit and 10-gigabit Ethernet, terminated to spec and certified with a Fluke DTX tester. Every run labeled. Every port mapped.
Single-mode and multi-mode fiber for building risers, floor-to-floor backbone, and point-to-point links. Fusion splicing and OTDR testing on site.
Patch panels, ladder racks, and cable trays that keep your infrastructure clean. Future expansion stays easy because the path is already there.
Full rack installations with power distribution, UPS integration, and ventilation. Designed to be maintained, not just to work on day one.
A new tenant signs, the buildout has a hard move-in date, and the cabling sub fell through. The GC needs someone who can pull, terminate, and certify without holding up the schedule.
What we install: A full cabling package on your timeline. We coordinate with the GC and electrician to share pathways, pull and dress the runs, and Fluke-certify every drop before handoff. As-built drawings and a labeled port map included.
More people, more devices, and a network that chokes every afternoon. The existing cable is a mix of CAT5 and whatever the last installer had on the truck.
What we install: A clean CAT6 or CAT6A backbone sized for what the office actually pulls, terminated to standard and tested. One labeled rack instead of a closet of mystery cable.
Switches stacked on a shelf, no cable management, and nobody can trace a run without unplugging things and hoping.
What we install: A proper rack and data-room buildout. Patch panels, labeled runs, cable management, and a port map so the next person traces any connection in seconds.
Regular electrical carries 120V or 240V power for outlets and lighting. Low voltage runs below 50 volts and carries data, security, intercom, and AV. Low voltage work in NYC doesn't require a master electrician license, but it does require technicians trained to TIA/EIA cabling standards to perform.
Yes. We work alongside GCs and electricians during buildouts. We pull cable before walls close, share pathways where it makes sense, and return after construction to terminate, test, and certify. Bringing us in early keeps the cable plan clean and avoids rework later.
Yes. We run single-mode and multi-mode fiber for building risers, floor-to-floor backbone, and links between buildings. Our technicians fusion-splice on site and test every connection with an OTDR to confirm signal loss is within spec.
Yes. Plenum-rated (CMP) cable is required in air-handling spaces — typically above drop ceilings used for HVAC return. Riser-rated (CMR) cable is required for vertical runs between floors. Both are fire-code requirements, and using the wrong rating is one of the most common reasons NYC low-voltage installs fail inspection. We spec the right rating per pathway during the design phase and pull the right cable for every run.
A Fluke test report for every run. As-built drawings showing actual cable paths. A labeled port map. Your records, your infrastructure, ready for whoever maintains it next.
Often it's the cabling, not the internet plan. Old CAT5 or poorly terminated runs can't carry what a full office pulls at peak. A certified CAT6 or CAT6A backbone removes that bottleneck. We test what you have during the survey and tell you whether the cable is the real problem.
Yes. We pick up stalled buildouts and fit-outs, document what's already pulled, finish the runs to standard, and Fluke-certify everything. You get a clean test report and a labeled port map regardless of who started the job.
Send us your floor plan or tell us about the building. We’ll set up a site visit and quote what the job actually costs.