Services
Structured Cabling
Cat6, fiber, patch panels, and clean cable runs, installed and tested to standard.
Cabling is the one part of your network you can't fix with a software update. It gets installed once, hidden in a ceiling, and then everything else you buy for the next fifteen years has to run over it. Do it badly and you'll be paying for it long after whoever pulled it has moved on.
Nexus designs and installs structured cabling for businesses across New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and New York. New builds, fit-outs, expansions, and the occasional rescue of what somebody else left behind. And when the building itself is the obstacle, plaster on metal lath, solid masonry, no conduit anywhere, we wrote about what that job actually takes.
Cat6, fiber, and structured cabling design
New builds and fit-outs. Drop locations planned around how the space will actually be used, not where the outlets happened to land. Pathways, risers, and a rack layout with room to grow into.
Adds, moves, and changes. A new department, a wall that moved, twelve more desks than the floor was built for. We extend what's there rather than starting over, when starting over isn't warranted.
Fiber and backbone. Building-to-building runs, floor-to-floor backbone, and the uplinks between closets that decide whether your network feels fast or feels like the 90s. Where trenching between buildings isn't worth the cost, a wireless bridge can carry the link instead.
Cleaning up what's already there. Undocumented runs, a patch panel nobody labeled, a rack that grew organically for a decade. We trace it, label it, and hand you a record of what's connected to what. Here is one of those rescues at enterprise scale.
When New Jersey businesses call us
Moving into a new space and the walls are still open
Wi-Fi is fine in half the building and unusable in the other half
Nobody can tell which cable in the rack goes where
An electrician ran the data cable and it never quite worked right
You're adding access points, phones, or workstations and there's nowhere to plug them in
How cabling projects are scoped and billed
Cabling is project work, and it's the one service where nobody can quote honestly from a phone call. We walk the space, look at the pathways, and find out what's above the ceiling before putting a number on it. You get a written scope: run counts, terminations, materials, and what happens if we open a wall and find a surprise.
Every run is tested and labeled, and you get the documentation. That's not an upsell. It's the part that makes your next project cheaper.
Who does the work
The same engineers who design your network pull the cable it runs on. That matters more than it sounds. The person deciding where the switches go is the person who knows how far the runs are, and neither decision gets made in a vacuum.