Discuss a project with TekRoute
Send the floor plans, site count, cable or fiber type, endpoint quantities, rack details, schedule, and testing requirements you already know. If the scope is still developing, we can begin with a site survey and design-assistance discussion.
Information that helps us respond
- Project address or list of locations
- Facility type and operating schedule
- Existing equipment, drawings, photographs, or standards
- Desired outcome and known problems
- Target schedule, access, and reporting requirements
You do not need a complete specification before contacting us. We can identify the missing decisions and recommend the next practical step.
For a cabling or fiber request, share endpoint counts, drawings, telecommunications-room locations, approximate route lengths, cable or fiber type, connector standard, rack requirements, test standard, and construction schedule. Existing test reports and photographs can help distinguish expansion work from replacement or remediation.
During intake we distinguish furnished drawings from verified field conditions. Route capacity, ceiling access, riser use, firestopping, telecommunications-room readiness, rack elevations, grounding, patching, fiber polarity, test limits, naming, and drawing formats may need confirmation. Capturing the required closeout format before installation helps the field team collect usable evidence the first time.
A useful infrastructure proposal identifies quantities, media, routes, terminations, rack and pathway responsibilities, certification or optical test deliverables, labeling, drawing updates, exclusions, and assumptions. When field verification is still required, we can scope a survey first and use the results to produce a more dependable installation plan.
Phone: +1 (888) 360-0035
Headquarters: 6201 Fairview Rd, Charlotte, NC 28210
Send a project request
Share the project basics below. An infrastructure specialist will review the request and help identify the appropriate survey, design, estimate, testing or installation next step.
What happens after the first conversation
The next step should match the maturity of the project. Some requests are ready for pricing; others need a survey, pilot, design review, or troubleshooting visit first.
Review
Review drawings, endpoint counts, routes, rooms, and backbone needs
Measure
Confirm copper, fiber, rack, wireless, pathway, and testing standards
Coordinate
Identify construction, access, outage, and trade-coordination dependencies
Scope
Prepare a survey, budget, design-assistance, or installation scope