The Wiring You Don’t
Think About Until You Need It.
Low voltage is the work that decides whether your Wi-Fi reaches the back bedroom, whether your smart doorbell rings reliably, whether your TV mount looks clean or has a cable hanging out the bottom, whether your home network handles four people streaming simultaneously without buffering. It’s also the work that’s easiest to skip during a remodel and most regretted later.
We pull low voltage during construction (when walls are open it’s straightforward) and we fish into existing walls when needed. Either way: structured cabling, terminated cleanly, certified with proper test equipment, organized in a network closet you can actually work in.
What We Install.
- Cat6 and Cat6a Ethernet — whole-home network drops, terminated with quality jacks, certified with a network tester
- Network closet rack — 12U or 18U wall-mount racks with patch panels, switches, and proper ventilation
- Wi-Fi access points — ceiling-mounted Ubiquiti, Eero, or Orbi APs hardwired with PoE
- TV cable runs — HDMI, coax, fiber where required for premium AV systems
- Smart doorbells — Ring, Nest Doorbell, Eufy, with transformer upgrades for modern current draw
- Intercoms and door stations — including modern IP-based systems integrated with smart home
- Security camera wiring — PoE camera runs with proper junction boxes and weatherproofing
- Smart home backbone — Lutron RadioRA wiring, Crestron-adjacent backbone, Brilliant Control panel runs
- LED strip and accent lighting — under cabinet, toe kick, cove, stair, and mirror low-voltage lighting
- Pool perimeter LED — low-voltage LED around pools, with proper transformer and bonding
- Speaker wiring — Sonos in-ceiling, whole-home audio backbone
- Data center for home office — dedicated network drops, UPS-backed receptacles, Cat6 patch fields
Our Process.
- Walk-ThroughWe discuss what you want connected. Where the network closet should live (typically a coat closet, garage corner, or basement). Where APs need coverage. Which rooms need TV cable. Smart doorbell location. Security camera coverage zones.
- Plan & QuoteItemized quote: cable runs (per drop), terminations, jacks, faceplates, network rack and patch panel, transformer upgrades for doorbells, switches and access points if we’re providing.
- PullsWe pull during the rough-in phase if walls are open, or fish through attic/wall cavities for existing-wall work. Routing planned to minimize patch work.
- TerminationEach drop terminated with proper RJ45 jacks (T568B standard), tested under load, labeled at both ends.
- Network Closet SetupRack mounted, patch panel populated, switches racked, cables labeled and dressed cleanly. The closet looks like a server room, not a rat’s nest.
- Testing & DocumentationNetwork tester certifies every drop. Speed-tested under load. Documented map of every drop and its location handed off to you.
Cost & Timeline.
Typical timeline: 1 day for a single doorbell or single drop, 2-4 days for whole-home structured cabling, longer if coordinated with a remodel.
Why Now.
Low voltage during a remodel is simple and cheap. Low voltage in finished walls is expensive and creates patchwork. If you’re doing any kitchen or bathroom remodel, an addition, or a full rewire, this is the time to add Cat6, an in-wall HDMI run, a doorbell upgrade, or LED accent lighting — the walls are already open. We coordinate with your GC if you have one.