Telecommunications Design Standards: Revision 21.5 - January 1, 2018 Colorado State University
Telecommunications Design Standards: Revision 21.5 - January 1, 2018 Colorado State University
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Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction ................................................................................................. 4
1. Departments Involved in Design Process ............................................................ 4
2. Applicable Standards ............................................................................................ 4
3. General Guidelines ............................................................................................... 5
4. Equipment and Materials Specifications .............................................................. 5
5. Contractor Certifications ....................................................................................... 6
Chapter 2: Horizontal Infrastructure ............................................................................. 7
Chapter 3: Communications Rooms .......................................................................... 10
1. Main Distribution Room – MDF ..................................................................... 10
2. Intermediate Distribution Room (IDF) ........................................................... 12
3. Campus Room Types .................................................................................... 15
4. Grounding and Bonding ................................................................................ 15
Chapter 4: Riser/Building Backbone Infrastructure.................................................... 19
Chapter 5: Building Entrance Infrastructure ............................................................... 21
1. General .......................................................................................................... 21
2. University Policy Governing Entrance Infrastructure .................................... 21
Chapter 6: Outside Plant Infrastructure ...................................................................... 22
1. Introduction and Project Conditions .............................................................. 22
2. Landscaping, Irrigation Systems, Site Protection and Excavation .............. 22
3. Directional Boring Specifications .................................................................. 23
4. Trenching ....................................................................................................... 23
5. Steam Tunnel Cable Installation ................................................................... 24
Chapter 7: Network Switches ..................................................................................... 25
Chapter 8: Wireless Access Points and Devices ....................................................... 27
Chapter 9: VOIP .......................................................................................................... 29
Chapter 10: TV/Video ................................................................................................. 30
Chapter 11: Emergency and Inter/Intra Building Life and Safety Infrastructure ....... 31
Appendix A – Network Switch Protocol Specifications .............................................. 32
Appendix B – Communication Room Layout ............................................................. 33
Appendix C – Wall Mounted Wireless ........................................................................ 34
Appendix D – Ceiling Mounted Wireless .................................................................... 35
Appendix E – Outdoor Mounted Wireless .................................................................. 36
Appendix F – Hard Lid Ceiling Mounted Wireless ..................................................... 37
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Revision History .......................................................................................................... 38
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Chapter 1: Introduction
This document provides design specifications for voice, video and data
communications infrastructure at Colorado State University (CSU), otherwise
referred to as the University. Several departments are responsible for this
communications infrastructure and should be involved in the design process. These
include 1) CSU Telecommunications for the physical infrastructure, 2) Academic
Computing and Networking Services (ACNS) for the network equipment and video
and 3) Classroom Support Services for Smart classrooms. Contacts for these
departments are given below.
Table 1. Contacts
Department Name Phone
Academic Computing & Networking Services (ACNS) Greg Redder (970) 491-7222
Classroom Support Services Al Powell (970) 491-6226
Telecommunications Project Planner Pat Demchok (970) 491-1148
The individuals above shall be consulted initially during all phases of design. As
questions arise during the construction phase, the above individuals are also to be
consulted.
2. Applicable Standards
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BICSI DD 120-Grounding Fundamentals for TELCO Facilities Chapter 4
Telecommunications Systems Grounding (as reference)
IEEE 802.3-1993
Systimax Structured Cabling System (SCS) standards
3. General Guidelines
Note that there are some materials for which no substitutions are allowed. Where
substitutions are allowed, these must be pre-approved in writing in an addendum
prior to the final design bid. Questions about substitutions of these materials should
be referred to the University designated representative (Table 1 Contacts).
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5. Contractor Certifications
Please refer to Table 1 Contacts for the Telecommunications contact person for
questions regarding this section.
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Chapter 2: Horizontal Infrastructure
Cable Colors – The following is the color standard for all horizontal cable on campus
Plenum Spaces - Plenum cabling or conduit shall be used in plenum spaces, this
includes under floor space. Contractor shall determine prior to work being started, in
consultation with CSU Telecommunications and CSU Facilities, whether the space is
a plenum space.
Under Ground Cable – All cable placed in raceways installed underground shall be
rated for wet locations.
Patch Cords – the following is the standard color code for MDF/IDF Patch Cords
➢ Data - Red/Gray
➢ VoIP - White
➢ Security Cameras, Card Key, Meters, EMS, Facilities - Green
➢ Wireless -Yellow
➢ A/V - Violet
➢ Switch to Switch Link - Orange
➢ Department Specific - Light Blue
Patch cords must be of proper length to eliminate “Jump Rope” and “Banjo” style of
patching.
Conduit – Please refer to; Building Industry Consulting Services International (BICSI)
Telecommunications Distribution Methods Manual 11 th Edition v. 1,Section 1 –
Horizontal Pathway Systems, Chapter 4 – Horizontal Distribution Systems, p. 4.5 -
4.27 and Telecommunications Distribution Methods Manual v. II, Appendix A –
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Codes, Standards and Regulations, p. A7-A8 for details on the installation of
conduit.
Installation of Cable Trays – Install cable trays with sufficient space to permit access
for installing the cables. Clear space shall be provided above the top rail equal to the
loading depth but not less than 12 inches. Provide lateral clearance of 24 inches on
at least 1 side of the trapeze hung tray. CSU prefers aluminum ladder type cable
tray with 9” spacing on rungs. All cable trays must be trapeze hung. The use of wire
baskets is discouraged. If wire baskets are to be used, please contact the
Telecommunications Contact, Table 1, to discuss installation requirements.
Testing and Reporting of Test Results – Each Category 5e, 6, or 6a cable installed
shall be tested using a calibrated Fluke Series DSX-5000 Tester or higher version in
accordance with the latest EIA/TIA 568 standards, and the results recorded on a
separate USB stick for each building and provided to Telecommunications.
The Telecommunications contact from Table 1 shall be notified prior to any testing
so that the representative or designate may be present during the testing. If the
circuit testing is conducted in the absence of the University representative or
designate, then the University may request a retest with the University
representative present at the tester’s expense.
Systimax Certification – CSU requires that upon completion and testing of each
building/project, Systimax certification be obtained. The Telecommunications contact
person is responsible for coordinating the Systimax certification and facilitating any
remedies. Please refer to Table 1 – Contacts for the name of the
Telecommunications contact.
Drop (Circuit) Labeling – Each Category 5e, 6 and/or 6a drop installed shall be
labeled per CSU labeling scheme. Each drop shall be labeled on the front of the jack
faceplate, on the patch panel in the IDF or MDF, and on both ends of the cable.
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Labels: Four labels per fiber cable, two for the cable and two for the fiber patch
panel, shall be prepared for all fiber cables. The University may elect to install the
labels.
Invasive Work and Work Schedules - Invasive work (e.g., core drilling, hammer
drilling or work that is noisy, dusty, etc.) shall be conducted during off-business
hours. Other work shall be coordinated with the University designated representative
(e.g., to pull cables during off-hours), and these arrangements shall be determined
by mutual agreement.
Scheduling for the pulling of cable: Telecom crews will pull low voltage cable inside
the building, terminate it at the specified wall jacks, test and certify the cable. In
order to do this work, the contractor will need to coordinate with telecom (see Table
1 "Contacts") to ensure cable work is scheduled and complete prior to the
installation of the ceiling grid. This will allow easy access to the cable trays and
ensure that telecom crews do not damage the ceiling grid. If the ceiling grid is
installed prior to cabling work, telecom will not be responsible for any damage to the
grid and will begin using contingency funds to pay for the extra labor expense.
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Chapter 3: Communications Rooms
Buildings shall have a MDF where voice, video and data enter the building. The
MDF also serves as the distribution point for voice, video and data and shall be
secure to protect the integrity of these systems, particularly E911 services.
Grounding and bonding shall be provided in the MDF that includes bonding to
equipment racks, cable trays and telecommunications conduits in strict accordance
with the ANSI/TIA 607 standard, the most current edition NEC, and as a reference
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BICSI DD 120-Grounding Fundamentals for TELCO Facilities, Chapter 4
Telecommunications System Grounding and extended to all IDFs as described
therein. All penetrations of the MDF envelope shall be fire-stopped.
ANSI/TIA 569 shall be strictly observed for the MDF, especially as to location (away
from electromagnetic interference), perimeters (no false ceilings), limited access
(i.e., security), HVAC, lighting and electrical.
MDF shall be provided with four dedicated and one general use circuits.
Two 20 amp, 120 volts NEMA 5-20 terminated on double duplex outlets,
and two 30 amp, 208 volts NEMA L6-30 outlet on the wall adjacent to the
telecommunications racks. The general use outlet shall be near the door for ease of
access – these locations shall be determined in consultation with CSU
Telecommunications.
The MDF shall have 3/4" A/C fire treated plywood backboards to be installed on all
walls, 8’ high, painted with matte white paint.
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The MDF serves as the fiber distribution point for the building and houses the
network switches. ACNS will design the network-switching infrastructure.
In a multi-story building, there should a phone room on each floor, centrally located.
CSU requires that the MDF be located on the ground floor. All data cable runs are to
be limited to 90 meters in length.
The MDF shall be large enough to accommodate at least two 7’x19” relay racks and
3 - 12” vertical organizers; one rack for the building fiber and copper distribution and
the other for the building data switches and associated UPS. The MDF shall also
accommodate the voice and video distribution systems which may be wall or rack
mounted.
All raceways into the MDF envelope shall be a fire barrier pathway.
Doors shall open outward and adhere to all fire codes. It may be necessary to install
double opening doors for this purpose. Self-closing locksets shall be used to ensure
doors are secure upon their closure.
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The following are general guidelines in the absence of a custom communications
room design.
Grounding and bonding shall be provided in the IDF that includes bonding to
equipment racks, cable trays and telecommunications conduits in strict accordance
with ANSI/TIA J-STD-607-A-2002 standard, the most current edition NEC, and as a
reference BICSI DD 120-Grounding Fundamentals for TELCO Facilities, Chapter 4
Telecommunications System Grounding and extended to all IDFs as described
therein. All penetrations of the IDF envelope shall be fire-stopped.
ANSI/TIA 569 shall be strictly observed for the MDF, especially as to location (away
from electromagnetic interference), perimeters (no false ceilings), limited access
(i.e., security), HVAC, lighting and electrical.
IDF shall be provided with four dedicated and one general use circuits.
Two 20 amp, 120 volts NEMA 5-20 terminated on double duplex outlets
and two 30 amp, 208 volts NEMA L6-30 outlet on the wall adjacent to the
telecommunications racks. The general use outlet shall be near the door for ease of
access – these locations shall be determined in consultation with CSU
Telecommunications.
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Each floor shall have a dedicated IDF. IDFs shall be environmentally conditioned to
accommodate network equipment loads up to 7,000 BTU/hr/. Temperature in IDFs
shall not exceed 80°F.
The IDF shall have 3/4" A/C fire treated plywood backboards to be installed on all
walls in the IDF, 8’ high, painted with matte white paint.
The IDF serves as the fiber access point for the building and houses the network
switches. ACNS will design the network-switching infrastructure.
IDFs shall be located at points that minimize the runs of the data network to the end
user, typically in the center of wings of buildings. Data cable runs are to be limited to
90 meters, and this may affect placement of the IDF or require additional IDFs to be
added.
IDFs shall be sized such that there is ample room to install racks to house the
equipment. The IDF shall be sized to accommodate a minimum of two vertical 7'x19"
relay racks and 3 - 12” vertical organizers: one for the fiber, an IDF switch, and UPS;
and another for edge network switches. Ideally, there shall be 48” of space on each
side of the rack lineup. Preferably, the MDF and IDF shall be vertically stacked
within the building.
IDFs shall be sized to accommodate all connections that may potentially be used
from that room. In a typical scenario, an IDF would serve an area of approximately
10,000-15,000 Assignable Square Feet (ASF), depending on density of connections
deployed from the IDF.
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building master cylinder be placed in the MDF/IDF locks. Access to communication
rooms cannot be blocked by gates, doors or fences not utilizing campus master key
system.
Several generic types of rooms have been defined for categorization purposes.
Except for minimum numbers of jacks, the following are suggested configurations.
In all cases, the final numbers of jacks should be determined in consultation with
CSU Telecommunications and the building occupant.
Offices – In every office there shall be a minimum of two data locations, located on
opposite walls, each location will have at least two data jacks.
Where conduit is used, 1” conduit with a 4 11/16” square box 2 1/8” deep shall be
placed to each communications outlet.
Classrooms – classrooms shall have a minimum of one quad outlet, located at the
front of the room, with four data jacks. A podium will have a minimum of six data
jacks. Three conduits with long radius sweeps shall be run to each podium, one
conduit for electrical power, one 1" conduit dedicated to central data and voice
communications, and one 1 1/4" conduit run from the podium to the computer
projector in the ceiling. The projector shall be centrally located below the room’s
false ceiling with the wiring and conduit permanently attached to the ceiling
structure. The projector shall have one data jack. Electrical power shall also be run
to the ceiling-mounted projection system.
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27 – 33 2
34 – 41 1
42 – 52 1/0
53 – 66 2/0
> 66 3/0
ANSI/TIA J-STD-607-A 5.4.4.1
Figure 2
Main Building Ground
ANSI/TIA J-STD-607-A
5.3.1
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Figure 3, below, depicts a typical grounding and bounding scheme for a multistory
building. It is intended as a guide rather than explicit instructions.
Figure 3
Building Ground
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ANSI/TIA J-STD-607-A
Figure 3.1-1
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Chapter 4: Riser/Building Backbone Infrastructure
The building backbone cabling consists of fiber cable for data and video and copper
cable for voice. These cables shall be run between the MDF to all the IDFs in a star
topology. Check with the Telecommunications contact from Table 1.
The infrastructure for the building backbone cabling shall consist of conduit between
the MDF and each IDFs where the run is vertical, or ladders racks (not hooks or
rings) where the run is horizontal. Where conduits are run, separate conduits shall
be used for copper cables (voice) and fiber cables (data and video). However, where
runs are horizontal and ladder racks are used, both types of cables shall be run in a
ladder rack.
EIA/TIA 569 shall be observed for the building backbone pathways. Conduits shall
be sized to be no more than 40% full by volume. Long-radius metal sweeps shall be
used instead of 90° fittings. No more than 180 degrees of bends between pull points
shall exist in conduits without inclusion of a readily accessible and adequately sized
pull box, the location of which shall be clearly marked on drawings. In situations
where cable tray, conduit, or sleeves extend outside the MDF/IDF into occupied
portions of the building, they shall be fire-stopped.
Both single-mode and 50-micron OM4 multimode fiber cable shall be run between
the MDF and each IDF in a star configuration. At minimum, there shall be no less
than 12 single-mode and 12 multimode fibers installed. A higher fiber optic pair
count shall be permissible in consultation with Telecommunications. Fiber cables
shall be run in conduit or in innerduct if cable tray distribution method is selected.
The fiber count depends on the number of data jacks in each IDF. One pair of
multimode fibers is required for every 48 active data jacks with a 30% allowance for
growth. Each number shall be rounded up to the next integer. Table 8 below
illustrates fiber counts for a variety of situations:
Note that fiber bundles are available only in certain numbers of pairs. As an
example, consider the example where bundles with 12 fibers (6 pairs) are used. For
the second example above, 144 active jacks, one 12-count (6-pair) cable would be
required. For the last example above, 336 active jacks, two 12-count cables would
be required. On a typical installation of a composite 12 single mode and 12 OM4
multi-mode fibers installed between the MDF and IDF a minimum of two single mode
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fibers shall have factory terminated APC (Angle Polished) connectors to a
accommodate video transfer.
Multimode fiber shall be tested post installation at 850 nm and 1300 nm.
A bidirectional end-to-end test shall be conducted at dual wavelength for each fiber
installed.
Prior to acceptance by the University, the OTDR and end-to-end test shall be
randomly sampled and retested by the University.
Cable ladder racks shall be hung in a manner that ensures a minimum of 12" vertical
clearance and 18" horizontal clearance on at least one side to allow for sufficient
access to the ladder rack for cable installation and maintenance. Mount cable ladder
racks between 7 and 8 feet AFF (above the finished floor) so as to be accessible by
cable handlers using standard 6-foot ladders. Transitions where changes in height
are unavoidable shall be gradually sloping. The cable ladder rack shall be routed so
as not to interfere with installation of other systems or access to those systems for
maintenance. Coordination with other systems shall be maintained so that, where
these systems traverse above or below the ladder rack, access shall not be blocked
or interfered with. Cable ladder racks shall not pass through firewalls. Instead, the
ladder rack shall stop on either side of the firewall and be interconnected via multiple
fire barrier pathways passing through the firewall. The bottom of these pass-through
devices shall be aligned with the top of the cable ladder to ensure proper cable
support and unrestricted passage. These pass-through conduits shall be no more
than 40% full.
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Chapter 5: Building Entrance Infrastructure
1. General
At the University, telecommunications typically enter the building into the Main
Distribution Frame or MDF. Thus, generally at the University, the Building Entrance
and the MDF are one and the same. In certain venues, Telecommunications may
require the addition of an Entrance Facility to accommodate an interface between
non-CSU service providers. Buildings are required to have physically diverse paths
to the campus fiber infrastructure from the MDF.
EIA/TIA 569 shall be observed for the building entrance. Underground conduits
entering a building shall be dedicated for the exclusive use of Telecommunications
and no more than 25% full by volume.
ANSI/TIA 758-B section 4.3 shall be observed in providing diverse entrance points
and routes.
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Chapter 6: Outside Plant Infrastructure
The contractor shall be responsible for conducting all potholing and/or locates of all
utilities along the prescribed route. The contractor is responsible for contacting
UNCC at 811. In addition, it is the contractor’s responsibility to ensure that all utilities
are located including CSU’s utilities. Facilities Management telephone number is
970-491-0077.
Locate and protect existing utilities and other underground work in a manner that will
insure that no damage or service interruption will result from excavating and
backfilling.
When applicable, the contractor shall be responsible for acquiring all relevant
permits for street, alleys, easements, utility corridors, etc. from the City of Fort
Collins.
When utilities are damaged, the contractor shall immediately contact CSU
Telecommunications (970-491-5881) and CSU Facilities Management (970-491-
0077).
The contractor agrees to remedy all defects identified by CSU during the final
inspection of the contractor’s work. The scheduling of the remedies shall be
approved by CSU. The contractor shall be responsible for obtaining a final work
acceptance signature, from the University designated representative, on a mutually
agreed upon “punch list” to indicate acceptance of the contractor’s work by CSU.
The contractor is responsible for adhering to all applicable industry and personal
safety standards, including, but not limited to OSHA standards.
The contractor shall be responsible for providing an as-build drawing. Please refer to
As-Builds section in Chapter 2 for details. However, for outside plant infrastructure
projects, the contractor in addition shall illustrate route(s), depth and benchmark
measurements from existing landmarks and fixtures.
The contractor shall report on the progress of the work to the Telecommunications
contact from Table 1 on a mutually agreed-upon schedule.
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Contact CSU Facilities Management at 970-491-0077 for all requirements.
Materials - Installed two-inch (2”) inner duct, quantity to be determined. The inner
duct shall have a No. 12 UF type tracer wire installed outside the duct along the
entire path of the duct. The Telecommunications contact from Table 1 shall approve
any deviation.
Conduit shall only have new 1800 lb. Sequential Mule Tape, supplied and installed
by the contractor, in each duct without knots and splices. The mule tape shall be
exposed at least six feet (6’) for aiding in tying on to cable. Polyrope shall not be
accepted within the duct.
Installation - The inner duct shall be installed a minimum of forty-eight inches (48”) in
depth. The inner duct shall have a gradual 2” sweep into the J-box or a location
marked by CSU prior to start of work (e.g., manhole). The inner ducts shall have
duct plugs installed and secured around cable to prevent any debris from entering
the conduit. All vacant inner ducts shall have a duct plug installed and secured.
Building Entrance Only: Inner ducts exposed on the exterior of a building shall have
installed GRC fittings to National Electrical Code (NEC) specifications attached for
building entry conduit and approved by CSU. Plenum and non-plenum areas may
require additional consideration.
Splices, where applicable, shall be dug to the depth of the bore and be in a straight
line with the two (2) adjoining bores.
Manholes - shall be pumped and cleaned before and after work is completed. Shall
have sufficient racking drilled and mounted for cable attachment and service coil
support. CSU shall be consulted for determination of service coil length and racking
requirements. Inner duct entering through the manhole or concrete foundations shall
be core drilled and have link seals installed.
Traffic Control - The contractor shall be responsible for providing traffic control
commensurate with the requirements of the work it is conducting, and adheres to all
municipal, State, and Federal guidelines and standards.
4. Trenching
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Installation of Conduit and Vault - All conduits shall be installed a minimum of 48” in
depth. When PVC conduit is placed in a trench, PVC coated GRC or fiberglass large
radius sweeps shall be used.
Contractor shall ensure that the integrity of the vault is retained throughout its
installation. To the extent necessary, the contractor shall internally brace the vault to
ensure its integrity throughout installation and soil compaction. Also refer to Chapter
6 Section 6 – Excavation Backfill for more details.
Each newly installed or reinstalled vault shall be excavated 2’ deeper in order to
accommodate for 2’ 1” minimum aggregate of rock to bring the vault to grade and
maintain adequate drainage.
Each newly installed or reinstalled vault shall have a 3M 1401 – XR 4” Ball Marker
installed inside the vault.
Vaults shall NOT be drilled or penetrated without prior approval.
Vaults shall be sized to neatly accommodate copper and/or fiber optic cables and
service coils.
Conduits shall gradually sweep in below the bottom of the fiberglass vaults.
Ducts shall have duct plugs installed and secured around cable to prevent any
debris from entering the conduit.
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Chapter 7: Network Switches
Buildings shall be supplied with a building data switch and sufficient edge switches
to provide network access to current users. ACNS shall be responsible for specifying
the specific brand and model for network equipment. Using this standard equipment
will ensure that the network equipment is compatible with campus backbone network
equipment. This is the only way to ensure that performance, advanced features such
as Quality of Service (QoS), multicast, security, and manageability, will exist and
interoperate with campus networking infrastructure.
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the contractor can have a temporary point to point connection installed at their
expense.:
• For a permanent network to be installed, the MDF and any required IDFs will
need to be completed. Completion is defined as clean, dust free (including
dust from any outside construction taking place), locked and accessible to
telecom employees only, with ¾ A/C Plywood installed per specifications.
Further definition requires permanent power to be in place, all cooling
installed and completed, drywall operations complete, cable tray and conduit
work completed and that the room is not being used for storage.
• Temporary network solution: For an additional charge, telecommunications
can install a temporary data network to be used for testing of building
systems. This additional charge includes temporary switches, cleaning and
re-calibrating test equipment, professionally cleaning the communications
rooms prior to installation, cleaning all fiber connections after the temporary
network has been removed and before the permanent network is installed.
•
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Chapter 8: Wireless Access Points and Devices
• Wireless access points are defined as any device adhering to the IEEE
802.11 WiFi specifications for network access.
• Wireless devices are all other devices operating in the same spectrums as
the IEEE 802.11 WiFi specifications, i.g.: 2.4Ghz, 5GHz
• Two cat6a cables shall be provided to every access point location.
• PoE+ will be provided over each of the cat6a cables to wireless access
points.
• ACNS will specify the type, count and location of all access points.
• No additional access points or devices acting as an access point can be
connected to the campus network per campus IT Security Policy.
• ACNS must approve the use of any wireless device that will connect into the
data network. This is to ensure proper balance of devices within the available
spectrums.
• ACNS will specify locations on DD prints for locations of access points. It is
the contractor’s responsibility to ensure that these access points are placed
within a 1’ diameter of the specified location. If the access points are not
placed as specified, it is the contractor's responsibility to move and pay for
putting the access point in the position specified.
• Wall Mounted Wireless:
o Provide a recessed 4"x4"x2" box with no plate in wall for wireless
mounting
o Mount box flush to finished wall surface
o Mount wireless box 7’-12’ above finished floor (AFF).
o Mount wireless box no less than 1’ from center of box to ceiling
o Mount box vertical (screw holes top to bottom)
o At least 1’ of clearance from box on all sides
o See Appendix C
• Ceiling Mounted Wireless:
o Provide a 4"x4"x2" box above ceiling tile with plate
o If ceiling height is more than 15’, mount wireless on wall rather than
ceiling (If this occurs please notify CSU telecom of change because
this will change type of wireless used)
o Need at least 30-day notice of what type of ceiling tile will be used
before install of wireless
o See Appendix D
• Outdoor Mounted Wireless:
o Provide a recessed 4"x4"x2" box with a ground
o See Appendix E
• Hard Lid Ceiling Mounted Wireless:
o Provide a 4"x4"x2" box flush to ceiling with no plate
o Mount box flush to finished surface
o See Appendix F
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• Wireless access points cannot be installed prior to building completion as
drywall dust blocks the heat exhaust fans causing them to overheat.
• In order to properly quote the cost for wireless access point, telecom needs to
know:
o The Room Size
o The Ceiling Height
o Description of room usage, e.g.: classroom, conference room, lab
space, maximum occupant count
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Chapter 9: VOIP
Phone service for University locations is provided by the Telecommunications and
ACNS. All installations are to support current VOIP standards. Consultation with
ACNS contact as listed in table 1 is required to ensure compliance with all current
standards. Contractor is required to provide drawing to the ACNS contact as listed
in table 1 so comments can be provided for the DD phase.
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Chapter 10: TV/Video
A fiber optic television splitter shall be provided in the MDF for video distribution to
the IDFs. Each IDF shall have its own fiber optic splitter and coaxial splitters.
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Chapter 11: Emergency and Inter/Intra Building Life and Safety Infrastructure
Colorado State University has contracted with Rave Wireless for Rave Alert. Rave
Alert is an emergency text notification service that delivers emergency notification to
subscriber’s cellular devices. Emergency text notifications will be composed by CSU
emergency/police and/or public relations personnel in case of an emergency on
campus and/or an outside event that affects the campus community. Rave Alert is
an optional subscription service for registered students and faculty and staff.
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Appendix A – Network Switch Protocol Specifications
Spanning-Tree: 802.1W (RSTP)
• Switch is not set as a root switch nor is the default priority reduced
• No loop or BPDU protect settings on feed port to campus switch. Campus
switch port should be configured as a regular data port
LLDP
• LLDP supported and enabled
SNMP
• SNMP v3 support
• SNMP community changed from the default
• Read/write disabled unless necessary
VLANs
• 802.1q support
• No central VLANs are to be configured on exempt switches
• Trunking
• LACP
Username/password and switch access
• username/password Changed from the default
• RADIUS authentication support
• SSH support
• https support
Multicast/IGMP
• Enabled for all VLANs and port connecting to campus switch
Naming/labeling
• Switch description defined in switch configuration including Building name,
room number
Routing
• Disabled
IPV6
• Supported
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Appendix B – Communication Room Layout
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Appendix C – Wall Mounted Wireless
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Appendix D – Ceiling Mounted Wireless
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Appendix E – Outdoor Mounted Wireless
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Appendix F – Hard Lid Ceiling Mounted Wireless
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Revision History
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