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Commercial structured cabling

Structured cabling and low-voltage installation for Collin County businesses.

Texas 67 Systems plans and installs organized commercial cabling for offices, retail spaces, churches, nonprofits, shops, and small warehouses across Melissa and nearby Collin County. Build the physical network foundation for workstations, phones, POS systems, printers, cameras, displays, and wireless access points.

Cat6 cablingPatch panels and racksAP and device dropsTesting and labeling
ServingMelissa, McKinney, Allen, Anna, Plano, Frisco, Princeton, and nearby Collin County
Built forOffices, retail, churches, nonprofits, shops, and light commercial spaces
ApproachPlanned, terminated, tested, labeled, and documented

Physical infrastructure

Clean cabling gives every connected system a better place to start.

Office and workstation drops

Place Ethernet where staff, printers, phones, payment terminals, displays, and other fixed devices will actually be used.

Wi-Fi access point cabling

Run cable to practical ceiling or wall locations so access points can be placed for coverage instead of wherever a connection happens to exist.

Rack and patch panel work

Bring cable runs back to an organized equipment location with patch panels, routing, labels, and room for the network hardware.

Testing and documentation

Test completed runs, identify the endpoints, and leave a clearer record for installation, troubleshooting, and future expansion.

Cabling scope

Commercial low-voltage cabling for the devices and systems your space depends on.

Common cable locations

  • Desks, offices, reception areas, and workstations
  • VoIP phones, printers, copiers, and POS terminals
  • Wireless access points and network equipment
  • Conference rooms, displays, and digital signage
  • Camera and doorbell network locations
  • Shops, counters, storage areas, and back offices

Installation details

  • Cat6 and project-appropriate data cabling
  • Wall plates, jacks, patch panels, and terminations
  • Rack or network cabinet planning
  • Cable routing and pathway coordination
  • Run testing, endpoint labeling, and documentation
  • Removal or cleanup of abandoned cabling when included in scope

Build-outs and renovations

Plan the low-voltage work while cable paths are still accessible.

Project coordination

  • Floor-plan and room-use review
  • Coordination with the owner or tenant
  • Scheduling with the general contractor and electrician
  • ISP handoff and network-room planning
  • Rough-in, trim-out, and equipment-readiness milestones

Helpful project details

  • Address, business type, and construction stage
  • Floor plans and reflected ceiling plans when available
  • Furniture, workstation, and equipment layouts
  • Counts for staff, phones, POS devices, cameras, and access points
  • Move-in or opening date and contractor contact

Process

A straightforward cabling project from site walk to documented handoff.

01

Assess

Review the space, plans, construction schedule, equipment location, device counts, cable pathways, and the systems each drop needs to support.

02

Install

Coordinate the work, route and terminate the agreed cabling, organize the rack or patch-panel side, and keep endpoints identifiable.

03

Test and hand off

Test applicable runs, correct issues found during verification, label the important connections, and provide useful documentation for the next stage.

Questions

Commercial structured cabling questions.

What types of businesses do you cable?

Texas 67 Systems works with small offices, retail spaces, churches, nonprofits, shops, professional suites, and other light commercial environments that need organized data and low-voltage cabling.

Can you work during a build-out or renovation?

Yes. That is often the best time to plan and install cabling because walls, ceilings, and pathways are more accessible. We can coordinate practical requirements with the owner, contractor, and electrician.

Do you install cable for wireless access points, phones, POS systems, and cameras?

Yes. The cabling scope can include network drops for access points, VoIP phones, POS terminals, printers, cameras, displays, and other Ethernet-connected equipment.

Can you clean up or expand existing cabling?

Yes. Existing offices often need additional drops, better labeling, patch-panel cleanup, abandoned-cable review, or a more organized equipment location.

Is network equipment included?

It can be. This page focuses on physical cabling, termination, testing, and organization. Network design, switches, firewalls, and Wi-Fi setup can be included through the related network installation service.

Related

Services that often follow commercial cabling work.

Next step

Planning cabling for a commercial space?

Send the city, business type, construction stage, floor plan if available, expected drop count, and the equipment or systems the cabling needs to support.

Start the Cabling Plan
Texas 67 Systems Commercial structured cabling, low-voltage installation, business networking, and Wi-Fi services in Melissa and Collin County.
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