Service Capabilities
Asset & Infrastructure Audits Services
A low-voltage asset audit from Data Installers is a systematic, room-by-room and closet-by-closet physical walkthrough of your commercial facility. Our technicians locate and document every low-voltage asset within scope: structured cabling runs and termination points, patch panels and their port-level documentation, network closet and IDF rack equipment, IP security cameras and analog CCTV systems, access control panels and door hardware, wireless access points, intercom and paging systems, AV equipment and rack systems, and any other low-voltage devices installed in your Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Pomona, Pasadena, Burbank, or Los Angeles facility. We verify what is actually installed versus what any existing documentation shows, note the physical condition and functional status of equipment, and record everything in a format that becomes your infrastructure inventory going forward.
For commercial facilities across Southern California that have changed tenants or ownership, undergone multiple renovation phases, or had different contractors working in them over the years — a description that covers a significant portion of the commercial real estate stock in the Inland Empire, San Gabriel Valley, and greater Los Angeles area — the actual installed infrastructure frequently does not match any documentation that exists. Security cameras have been added by one contractor, cabling has been rerouted by another, access control panels have been decommissioned but not removed, and the telco room contains a mix of equipment from four different contractors over 15 years. Our audit process creates the accurate, documented baseline that proper infrastructure management, technology planning, and compliance documentation require.
The deliverable from a Data Installers asset audit is a written report organized by system type and building area. It includes a physical inventory of installed assets with location references, condition assessments flagging equipment that is degraded, non-functional, or out of code, documentation of any infrastructure that poses code compliance or safety concerns, and recommendations for remediation prioritized by urgency and impact. For Southern California organizations that need to maintain compliance documentation for healthcare regulatory requirements, school district e-rate audit readiness, or commercial property insurance purposes, this kind of structured physical inventory is an essential operational document — not just a project delivaway.