If you’re planning a new office buildout, warehouse network or facility upgrade in the Chicago area, one of the first questions you’ll face is whether to run fiber optic cable, copper cabling, or both. The right answer depends on distance, bandwidth, environment and budget — and choosing wrong is expensive to fix after the walls close up.

The short answer

Most commercial buildings end up with a hybrid design: fiber for the backbone, copper to the desk. Fiber connects buildings, floors and equipment rooms; copper (Cat6 or Cat6a) covers the final run to workstations, phones, cameras and Wi-Fi access points, where it can also deliver power over Ethernet (PoE).

Where fiber wins

Where copper wins

How we decide on real projects

When RG Fiber walks a site, the design usually falls out of four questions: How far are the runs? How much bandwidth will the busiest links need in five years? What’s the electrical environment? And what devices need PoE? Warehouse over 100 meters end to end — fiber backbone, no debate. Office suite on one floor — Cat6a may be all you need. Plant floor full of VFDs — fiber between panels, copper only inside enclosures.

The mistake to avoid

The most expensive cabling mistake we see isn’t picking the wrong medium — it’s under-sizing pathways and counts. Conduit, tray and sleeves are cheap during construction and painful afterward. If budget forces a choice, install fewer cables but bigger pathways; pulling more cable later is easy when the path exists.

Planning a cabling or network project in Chicagoland?

RG Fiber installs fiber optics, structured cabling, business networks, phone systems and security cameras across Chicagoland and the Midwest — tested, labeled and documented.

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