CAT6 BLUE · Division 27 · Westchester & Hudson Valley
Structured Cabling Contractors in Westchester & Hudson Valley
Serving White Plains, Yonkers, New Rochelle, Mount Vernon, Tarrytown and every commercial corridor in Westchester & Hudson Valley.
- Cat6 / Cat6A / Cat8
- OM3–OM5 + single-mode fiber
- IDF/MDF build-outs
- Fluke-certified testing
- TIA-568 / TIA-606 compliant
- 25-year manufacturer warranties
From the corporate towers of downtown White Plains to the office parks strung along I-287, Westchester's commercial stock skews toward buildings from the 1970s and 80s that are now on their second or third full re-stack. Those renovations are where cabling projects live: abandoned cable abatement above old ceilings, new Cat6A to modern densities, and IDF closets rebuilt to support PoE loads the original electrical design never anticipated.
North of the county line, the Hudson Valley adds a different project mix — distribution centers rising along the Thruway corridor, food and beverage processors, and campus-style facilities that need fiber between buildings rather than just copper within them. Our network assigns crews based on that split: lab and office specialists for southern Westchester, and crews comfortable with tilt-up warehouse construction and outside-plant runs for Orange, Dutchess and Ulster county projects.
Structured Cabling where you are
The Tarrytown and Valhalla corridors concentrate two of the region's most demanding cabling environments: life-science labs and medical campuses. Both come with occupied-space rules — infection control protocols in clinical buildings, vibration and containment constraints in labs — that dictate when and how crews can open ceilings. We scope those constraints up front so the install schedule reflects how the building actually operates.
Our Westchester & Hudson Valley partner crews regularly work Platinum Mile / I-287 corridor (White Plains–Harrison), Regeneron and the Landmark at Eastview campus (Tarrytown), Westchester Medical Center campus (Valhalla) and the surrounding commercial areas — so mobilization is measured in days, not weeks.
What the work includes
A complete structured cabling scope runs from the demarc to the desktop. Our partner crews handle design and engineering support, rough-in coordination with the GC and electrician, cable pull and termination, and closeout documentation. On new construction we work from the Division 27 spec and respond to RFIs; on retrofits we field-verify pathways before quoting so there are no surprises above the ceiling.
- Horizontal cabling — Cat6, Cat6A or Cat8 drops to workstations, APs, cameras and printers
- Backbone cabling — multi-strand fiber or copper trunks between the MDF and each IDF
- Telecom room build-outs — racks, cabinets, ladder rack, patch panels, grounding and bonding
- Pathway and support — J-hooks, cable tray, sleeves, conduit stubs, firestopping at penetrations
- Testing and certification — Fluke DSX channel testing with results delivered for every link
- Labeling and as-builts — TIA-606 labeling at both ends plus patch panel schedules and floor plans
FAQ
Structured Cabling in Westchester & Hudson Valley — Questions
Do you handle cabling for lab and biotech space in Westchester?
Yes. Lab environments around Tarrytown and the Route 9 corridor are a regular part of our partner crews' work. That means coordinating with facilities on containment areas, scheduling pulls around active research space, and specifying cable and pathway types that meet the building's engineering standards.
Can one project cover buildings in both Westchester and the mid-Hudson Valley?
Yes — multi-site scopes are common for companies with a White Plains office and warehouse or manufacturing space upstate. We coordinate a single scope document and testing standard across sites, and assign crews local to each location so travel costs don't inflate the quote.
How much does structured cabling cost per drop in New York?
It depends on cable category, run lengths, ceiling conditions and labor market — a Cat6 drop in an accessible-ceiling suburban office costs meaningfully less than a Cat6A plenum run in a Manhattan high-rise with after-hours access rules. Union labor and prevailing-wage projects also price differently than open-shop work. Rather than quote a misleading flat number, we scope your actual conditions and return a per-drop price within 48 hours.
How long does a typical office cabling project take?
A 50–100 drop office fit-out typically installs in one to two weeks once materials are on site, assuming normal ceiling access. New construction runs on the GC's schedule — rough-in during framing, trim and termination after walls close, testing before turnover. Occupied-space retrofits done after hours take longer in calendar days but avoid disrupting your staff. We give you a schedule with the estimate, not after the deposit.
Need cabling in Westchester & Hudson Valley?
Tell us what you need. A licensed New York crew prices it — free, within 48 hours.