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Georgetown UniversityChooses Fiber
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“Fiber has sufficient bandwidth to do everything students need to do today, and in the foreseeable future…” |
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Practical considerations also played a part in the decision. Fiber offered the team a more centralized approach, eliminating the need for placing active equipment in multiple wiring closets. That, says Kogut, translates into an important security benefit, “The ability to connect all the residence rooms to a single closet results in a system that is more stable, more secure, and easier to monitor,” says Kogut. And, with dorm space at a high premium, the savings in space can mean the difference between having room for additional students or not. The project is a joint effort of Bell-Atlantic Network Integration (BANI), Siecor, Vivid Communications (a Siemon certified installer), and The Siemon Company. Bell Atlantic, the primary contractor on the project brought together all the necessary resources and key components to make this project a success. The university, which has standardized on Siemon products, will use Siemon faceplates and outlets throughout the installation. The flexibility of the Siemon system was also a primary consideration in the specification. “Siemon is an open architecture system,” says Paul Skafte, of Vivid Communications, “it can be customized to integrate with other products, which was critical on this project.”
Siemon’s work area modules were integrated with MTRJ connectors and fiber optic cable, without concern for compatibility issues, says Skafte, “Siemon offers a very diverse product line, plus the ability to customize products if necessary,” explains Skafte, “and the materials were all readily available.”
All Georgetown residences are planned to be complete by this fall, when work will commence on classrooms and administrative offices. “We expect to use Siemon products with the MTRJ fiber technology as our standard cabling solution,” says Kogut, “and we’ll take it building by building until all the networks are complete, about three years from now.”

Cabling topology used to support voice, video and data
in all Georgetown University dorm rooms.
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