Network Infrastructure
Installation in
San Jose, CA

+
Up to 25-Year Channel Warranty

Overview


Structured cabling and fiber optic runs are only as good as the infrastructure they terminate into. Racks, enclosures, patch panels, cable pathways, and telecom rooms are the physical layer that determines whether your network is organised, maintainable, and built to scale — or a tangled liability that creates problems for years.

We install complete network infrastructure for commercial businesses across San Jose — from a single wall‑mount rack in a small office to a fully engineered multi‑rack server room buildout for large enterprises. Every installation follows ANSI/TIA‑569 for pathways and spaces and ANSI/TIA‑942 for data center infrastructure, ensuring reliability, scalability, and code compliance.

This page covers our four core network infrastructure services — rack and cabinet installation, patch panel installation, server room cabling buildouts, and data center cabling. We also install the cable tray and pathway systems that support all of them.

Service 01

Rack & Cabinet Installation

Open-frame racks, enclosed cabinets, and wall-mount enclosures — properly grounded, levelled, and integrated with your cabling and power infrastructure.

Service 02

Patch Panel Installation

Cat6, Cat6A, and fiber patch panels — terminated, tested, labelled to your naming convention, and port-mapped with full documentation.

Service 03

Server Room Build-Outs

Complete server room installations: racks, structured cabling, fiber backbone, PDU mounting, cable management, grounding, and as-built drawings.

Service 04

Data Center Cabling

High-density copper and fiber cabling for colocation and private data centers — top-of-rack, overhead, and under-floor pathways to TIA-942-B standards.

Proper rack and enclosure installation is the foundation of an organised network room. An incorrectly installed rack — not levelled, not grounded, not adequately anchored — creates cable management problems, overheating risks, and safety issues. We do it right the first time.

We install open-frame racks, enclosed cabinets, and wall-mount enclosures for commercial businesses across San Jose. Whether it’s a single two-post wall mount for a small San Jose office or a 20-rack open-frame deployment for a large enterprise, the approach is the same: every rack level is properly grounded, secured to the building structure, and fully integrated with your structured cabling and power distribution systems.

Open-Frame Racks

Enclosed Cabinets

Wall-Mount Enclosures

Grounding & Bonding

WHAT’S INCLUDED

Delivery and unboxing of rack hardware
Assembly, levelling, and floor anchoring (seismic anchoring available — required in many Sacramento buildings)
Cable management hardware installation (1U/2U horizontal managers, vertical managers)
Proper grounding and bonding to building ground
PDU mounting and cable routing to power distribution
Integration with patch panels, switches, and cable pathways
Rack labelling and unit position documentation

San Jose is seismically active. Many San Jose commercial building leases and management requirements mandate seismic bracing for racks and cabinets. We install seismic floor anchoring and four-post seismic bracing kits where required, and can advise on what your specific building requires.

Rack TypeForm FactorDepthTypical Use
Two-Post Open Frame19″ / 23″ShallowPatch panels, switches, small IDF closets
Four-Post Open Frame19″24″–36″Servers, UPS, server rooms
Enclosed Cabinet19″24″–48″Shared spaces, edge deployments, offices
Wall-Mount Enclosure19″6″–24″IDF closets, small offices, remote locations

Patch panels are the organised termination point where all your structured cabling home runs land in the telecom room. A properly installed, labelled, and documented patch panel makes every move, add, and change in your network take minutes. A poorly terminated or unlabelled panel makes it a hours-long process — or worse, a source of intermittent failures.

We terminate Cat5e, Cat6, Cat6A, and fiber patch panels for San Jose businesses of all sizes — from a single 24‑port panel in San Jose office to 20+ panels across multiple IDFs in a multi-floor enterprise building. Every port is terminated to TIA‑568 standards, tested, labeled according to your naming convention, and port‑mapped in a detailed spreadsheet delivered at project completion.

Cat6 / Cat6A Termination

110-punch termination using Panduit or equivalent tools for consistent, reliable, low-loss connections. All terminations verified with continuity testing. Cat6 and Cat6A panels available in 24, 48, and high-density configurations.

Fiber Patch Panels

LC, SC, and MPO/MTP fiber patch panels for single-mode and multimode fiber termination. Pre-loaded adapter panels, loaded with pigtail-spliced tails, or accepting pre-terminated cable as required.

High-Density Panels

Angled patch panels, tool-less patch panels, and high-density solutions (48-port in 1U) for space-constrained Sacramento telecom rooms where rack space is at a premium.

Cable Dress & Management

All home run cables properly dressed into the panel from the rear, with correct bend radius maintained, strain relief secured, and cables bundled and labelled before they enter the cable management hardware.

WHAT’S INCLUDED

Panel rack mounting at correct height relative to switch and cable managers
Home run cable routing from cable management into panel rear
110-punchdown termination (T568B standard, T568A on request)
Level IV continuity test on all ports
TIA-568.2-D performance test if certification is required
Port labelling to your naming convention (or our standard convention)
Complete port map spreadsheet: panel port → cable ID → outlet location
Photo documentation of completed panel

We terminate to T568B by default — the most common commercial wiring standard in the United States. If your organisation uses T568A (common in government installations) or you have existing cabling that must match, simply specify at the time of quote and we terminate accordingly. Mixing T568A and T568B within the same installation creates cross-over links and is a common cause of network problems — we never mix wiring standards within a project.

Panel TypeDensityHeightCommon Use
Cat6 24-Port24 ports1UStandard LA office IDF, small rooms
Cat6 48-Port48 ports1UMost common — commercial floor IDFs
Cat6A 24-Port24 ports1U–2UEnterprise, data center, PoE++ environments
Fiber LC 24-Port12 duplex ports1UFiber backbone termination at MDF/IDF
MPO/MTP Cassette12–24 fibers/cassette1UHigh-density data center fiber

A server room is the most business-critical space in your building. The quality of the cabling, rack layout, power distribution, and cable management determines whether your IT team can work efficiently and whether the room scales cleanly as your business grows — or whether it becomes a disorganised mess in three years.

We design and build complete server room infrastructure for San Jose businesses — from a single-rack IDF closet in a Midtown San Joseprofessional services firm to a dedicated 10-rack server room for a Downtown San Jose enterprise. Our buildouts cover everything from the cabling entry point to the last patch cord, all designed to ANSI/TIA‑942 and ANSI/TIA‑569 standards.

We’ve built server rooms in occupied office buildings throughout San Jose, coordinating with building management on fire-rated wall penetrations, ceiling access, conduit routing, and power requirements. We know the permit process, the building management offices at the major DTLA towers, and the practical constraints of building telecom rooms in San Jose’s diverse commercial building stock.

Room Assessment & Design

We assess your space, evaluate cooling and power, design the rack layout, and produce a cabling design with cable schedule and patch panel port map before installation begins. No improvising on site.

Structured Cabling Distribution

All horizontal cabling home runs terminated and dressed at the patch panels. Properly sized cable tray or J-hook pathways from the cabling entry point to every rack. Color-coded cable management where applicable.

Fiber Backbone

MDF fiber panel installation, inter-rack fiber routing, and fiber patch panel installation. Fusion-spliced connections where required, OTDR tested. Proper bend radius management throughout.

Rack & Power Layout

Rack placement with proper hot aisle/cold aisle spacing, PDU installation, and cable management hardware integration. Seismic anchoring per Sacramento building requirements where applicable.

Grounding Infrastructure

TGB (Telecommunications Grounding Busbar) installation, bonding conductor routing, and rack bonding per ANSI/TIA-607-B and NEC Article 800. Essential in older Sacramento buildings with ground noise issues.

Cable Management & Labelling

Horizontal and vertical cable managers in every rack, all cables properly dressed, velcro-tied, and labelled. Every patch panel port labelled both front and rear, with port map delivered at close.

What’s Delivered at Project Close

As-built drawings: floor plan showing rack positions, cabling entry, and pathway layout
Rack elevation drawings: unit-by-unit layout of equipment and patch panels per rack
Complete port map: patch panel port → cable ID → outlet location (every run)
Cable schedule: every cable labelled with IDs matching the port map
Test reports: Level IV or TIA-568 certification for all copper, OTDR for all fiber
Photo documentation: complete photo set of finished room, every rack, every panel
Manufacturer warranty registration where applicable

Working in Occupied Sacramento Office Buildings


Data center cabling is the most precision-intensive environment — high density, zero tolerance for errors, and every run must be documented, tested, and certified. We install structured cabling and fiber for colocation spaces, private data centers, and enterprise server rooms across Sacramento to ANSI/TIA‑942‑B standards.

San Jose has a growing data center market — colocation facilities and enterprise server rooms throughout the metro area serve numerous businesses. We’ve worked in many of these facilities as tenant contractors, navigating change management processes, Meet Me Room (MMR) access procedures, and strict cabling standards. We understand what “bring your own contractor” entails in a San Jose colo environment.

Top-of-Rack (ToR) Cabling

Cat6A copper and OM4/OS2 fiber home runs from top-of-rack switch positions to distribution frames. Properly managed, labelled, and routed per the facility’s pathway standards and your own documentation requirements.

Overhead Cable Management

Ladder rack, wire basket, and cable tray installation in the overhead space. Copper and fiber pathways run in separate trays with proper segregation, bend radius compliance, and weight loading per TIA-569 and facility requirements.

Under-Floor Cabling

Under-floor copper and fiber routing for facilities with raised-floor infrastructure. Proper sealing of floor cutouts, grommets on all penetrations, and documentation of under-floor pathways in as-built drawings.

High-Density Fiber

MPO/MTP trunk cable systems, fiber cassette enclosures, and high-density fiber distribution panels for 40G, 100G, and 400G environments. Pre-terminated trunk systems and on-site fusion splicing both available.

Colocation Build-Outs

End-to-end colocation cage and suite build-outs in San Jose facilities: rack installation, overhead cabling to MMR, structured cabling within the cage, and cross-connect ordering coordination with the facility.

Zone Distribution

TIA-942-B compliant zone cabling from Main Distribution Area (MDA) through Horizontal Distribution Area (HDA) to Zone Distribution Areas (ZDA) and Equipment Distribution Areas (EDA) for scalable data center design.

What’s Delivered at Project Close

As-built data center floor plan with rack locations, cable pathways, and distribution frame positions
Cable schedule: every run identified with end-to-end connectivity and label IDs
TIA-568.2-D or Level IV test reports for all copper cabling
OTDR trace reports (bidirectional) for all fiber strands
Overhead pathway as-built drawings (plan and section)
Photo documentation: complete photo set of every pathway, rack, and panel
Facility cross-connect records where applicable

San Jose Data Center Locations We’ve Worked In

StandardScopeRelevance
ANSI/TIA-942-BData center infrastructure and tiersDefines topology, pathway spacing, and tier ratings
ANSI/TIA-568.2-DCopper cabling performanceTesting standard for all Cat5e/6/6A installations
ANSI/TIA-568.3-DFiber optic cabling performanceTesting standard for all OM3/OM4/OS2 installations
ANSI/TIA-569-DPathways and spacesCable tray sizing, bend radius, and fill ratios
ANSI/TIA-607-BGrounding and bondingTGB installation and rack bonding requirements

Ladder Rack

Ladder Rack Installation

Steel and aluminium ladder rack for server rooms and data centers. Overhead installation with proper hanger spacing, grounding, and transition fittings at bends and drops. Available in 6″, 12″, 18″, and 24″ widths.

6″–24″ width
Overhead
NEC compliant
Wire Basket Tray

Wire Basket Tray

Wire mesh cable basket for telecommunications cabling — lighter than ladder rack, easier to route around obstacles, and ideal for horizontal runs in office ceilings and IDF closets where fill ratios are lower.

Mesh basket
Easy routing
TIA-569
Conduit

Conduit Installation

EMT, rigid, and flexible conduit for protected runs — through walls, in concrete, and in outdoor or industrial environments. Properly sized per NEC fill ratios with pull strings installed for future cable additions.

EMT / Rigid
NEC fill ratios
Pull strings
J-Hook & Bridle Ring

J-Hook & Bridle Ring Systems

J-hook pathway systems for lighter-duty horizontal cabling runs in suspended ceilings. Properly spaced per TIA-569 (maximum 4–5 foot intervals), never overfilled, and always maintaining cable bend radius.

4–5ft spacing
Plenum rated
TIA-569

What’s Included

  • Pathway design: sizing, routing, fill ratio calculations per TIA-569
  • Hardware supply and installation
  • Proper grounding and bonding of metallic pathway systems
  • Seismic bracing on overhead systems where required in LA
  • Fire-rated pathway penetrations and firestopping (3M or equivalent)
  • Pathway labelling and as-built documentation

Network infrastructure is a long-term investment. The rack that’s installed today will hold equipment for 10 years. The cable tray built now is where every future cable will live. Here’s why San Jose businesses trust us with this work.

Designed Before
It’s Built

We produce rack elevation drawings, cable schedules, and port maps before a single cable is pulled. This means the installation is organised and documented from day one — not reverse-engineered after the fact. Many San Jose businesses come to us to clean up an infrastructure that was never designed properly.

CA C-7 Licensed & Insured

California’s C-7 Low Voltage Contractor License (#1234567) is required for all commercial network infrastructure work. We’re fully licensed and insured, with the liability coverage and workers’ compensation required to work in San Jose Class A commercial buildings.

BICSI Certified Technicians

Our technicians hold active BICSI credentials — the global standard for ICT installation professionals. BICSI training covers everything from telecom room design to grounding, from cable tray sizing to TIA-942 data center standards.

Seismic-Aware Installations

San Jose is earthquake country. We install racks with proper seismic anchoring, design overhead cable trays with appropriate seismic bracing, and understand the seismic requirements in San Jose commercial building leases and occupancy permits.

Sacramento Building Experience

We’ve built server rooms and installed infrastructure in high-rises in DTLA and Century City, creative offices in Culver City and West Hollywood, entertainment campuses in Burbank, and industrial facilities throughout the South Bay. San Jose’s commercial building stock is diverse — we know its quirks.

Full Documentation Delivered

At every project close you receive as-built drawings, rack elevation diagrams, complete port maps, test reports, and photo documentation. Your next IT person — whether that’s tomorrow or in five years — will be able to understand exactly what was installed and where.

Free Site Survey

We visit your San Jose location and assess the existing infrastructure, available space, power distribution, cooling, cable pathways, and building-specific constraints. For server room and data center projects we produce a detailed site survey report. For rack and patch panel projects we confirm scope and identify any access requirements.

Design & Fixed-Price Quote

For any project beyond a simple rack installation we produce a design drawing and cable schedule before quoting. Within 24 hours of the site survey you receive a fixed-price quote with the complete scope of work. No hourly rates, no open-ended estimates, no change orders for scope we identified during the survey.

Pathway & Infrastructure Installation

We install cable tray, conduit, rack hardware, and grounding systems before structured cabling work begins. Pathways are sized to TIA-569 fill ratios, seismically braced where required, and documented with photos as we go. Fire-rated penetrations are sealed with listed firestopping systems.

Cabling, Termination & Dress

Structured cabling and fiber runs are pulled through the installed pathways, terminated at patch panels, labelled, and dressed into cable management hardware. All terminations follow TIA-568 wiring standards and are inspected before being dressed and secured. We document as we go — every cable gets its ID at the time of installation.

Testing & Certification

All copper runs are tested with a Fluke DSX-8000 CableAnalyzer to Level IV or TIA-568.2-D certification standards. All fiber is OTDR tested bidirectionally. Every test is recorded and any failures re-terminated and retested until the entire installation passes.

Documentation & Handoff

You receive: as-built drawings, rack elevation diagrams, cable schedule, port map spreadsheet, test reports, and a complete photo documentation set. For data center projects, facility cross-connect records are included. Manufacturer warranty registration is completed where applicable.

Google Rating Reviews – from data centers, entertainment studios, healthcare campuses, and corporate offices across San Jose.


Network infrastructure is the physical layer — these services are what runs through it and connects to it.

Cat5e, Cat6, and Cat6A installation for all the drops that terminate at your patch panels.

Single-mode and multimode fiber for your MDF-to-IDF backbone and inter-building connections.

Cat6A drops for wireless access points — the infrastructure that feeds your wireless network.

Cat6 drops for VoIP phones and PoE infrastructure in your telecom room.

TIA-568 certification testing for all copper and OTDR certification for all fiber.

Wiring closet cleanup, re-dressing, labelling, and documentation for existing installations.

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