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06 TIA569-Standard PDF

The document discusses the key recommendations of the EIA/TIA 569 standard for telecommunications pathways and spaces. It addresses physical characteristics like backbone pathways, entrance facilities, and equipment room guidelines. It provides details on service entrances, entrance facilities, pathways between telecom rooms and general design considerations for cable routing throughout the building.

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MHEP_DANIEL
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
1K views28 pages

06 TIA569-Standard PDF

The document discusses the key recommendations of the EIA/TIA 569 standard for telecommunications pathways and spaces. It addresses physical characteristics like backbone pathways, entrance facilities, and equipment room guidelines. It provides details on service entrances, entrance facilities, pathways between telecom rooms and general design considerations for cable routing throughout the building.

Uploaded by

MHEP_DANIEL
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
  • Introduction to EIA/TIA 569
  • Physical Characteristics and Installation Issues
  • Entrance Facilities
  • Room Criteria and Guidelines
  • Detailed Standards for Entrance Facilities
  • Telecom Room Layouts and Pathways
  • Architectural Masterformat
  • Conclusion

1

EIA/TIA 569

Design Considerations for


Telecommunications ELCM 254
Pathways and Spaces ©PRGodin @gmail.com
Updated January 2012
EIA/TIA 569
• A communications infrastructure in today’s
commercial buildings is essential. All buildings,
new and old, must have allowance for this
infrastructure.

• This standard addresses the architectural design


elements of cable pathways and dedicated
rooms for telecommunications equipment.
EIA/TIA 569
• The TIA/EIA 569 recommendations include:
▫ Physical Characteristics:
 Backbone and Horizontal pathway systems such as
conduit and tray
 Entrance Facilities
 Room space, size, conditions and design
▫ Installation and Performance Issues:
 Backboard installation
 Electromagnetic Interference
 Firestop
 Cable management and physical support
 Other factors that may affect cable performance
3
4
Entrance Facilities
• Includes service entrance, interbuilding
backbone, alternate entrance and antennae
entrance pathways.

• Consist of a termination field interfacing any


outside cabling to the intrabuilding cabling.

5
Service Entrance
• A service entrance is where outside companies
physically bring their services into a building.
▫ Electrical (power, ground)
▫ Communication (Voice, Video, Data)
▫ Alarm (Fire, Security)
▫ Wireless equipment connections (antenna)
▫ Other services outside of communications (water,
gas, etc)

• There may be more than one Service Entrance


facility in a building.
6
Demarcation on Service Entrance
• The Demarcation (Demarc) is the separation
between the service company’s cabling and the
building internal cabling structure.

Telco Bldg
Telco Cable Building Cable
Demarc
Telco Ownership Building Ownership
7
8
Room General Guidelines
• Located away from sources of electromagnetic
interference and sources of flooding

• No false ceilings.

• Should have limited, secure access (36” X 80”


single or double lockable doors).

9
Room Guidelines
• There are many additional guidelines addressed
specifically in the standards. Factors include:
▫ Humidity, temperature, vibration and dust controls
▫ Physical access issues, security and fire suppression
▫ Lighting and electrical requirements
▫ Ceiling height, construction, paint color
Building Entrance Facility
• Must contain protection against:
▫ Lightning
▫ Water
▫ Humidity
▫ Fire Spread
▫ Tampering

11
Entrance Facility Cables and Safety
• Local fire regulations will dictate termination
requirements and fire protection.
▫ Recommendation is terminate as close to the
entrance as possible.
▫ Fire control systems should be implemented.

• If the cable contains metallic elements it must be


lightning protected, even if buried.

12
Entrance Facilities
• Includes service entrance,
interbuilding backbone,
alternate entrance and
antennae entrance
pathways.
• Consist of a termination
field interfacing any
outside cabling to the
intrabuilding cabling.
Entrance Facilities (Details)
• Recommendation and Standards:
▫ One wall must contain a ¾ inch sheet of plywood,
painted white.
▫ Must not have false ceiling
▫ Has minimum standards for lighting, door size and
overall space.
▫ The service entrance pathway is either
underground, buried, aerial or tunnel.
▫ Must be secure.
▫ Must avoid electrical cable pathways.

14
Entrance Facilities (Details)
• Recommendation and Standards:
▫ Minimum conduit size:
 Minimum 4” conduit of PVC type B,C, or D or
multiple plastic duct or galvanized steel or fiberglass
(all with appropriate encasement)
▫ No more than 2 - 90° manufactured bends (10
times the diameter of conduit)
▫ Drain slope:
 should not be less than 12” per 100’
▫ Conduit fill varies
 should not exceed 40% for more than 2 cables
15
FYI
Entrance Facilities (Details) Only

• For buildings > 20,000 usable square feet, a


locked, dedicated, enclosed room is
recommended
• Buildings greater than 70,000 usable square feet
require such a room with a plywood termination
field installed on 2 walls.
• Up to 100,000 square footage, a wall mounted
termination field may serve as the entrance
facility (3/4 “ and 8” high)
• Beyond 100,000 square footage, rack mounted
and free standing frames may be required.
16
Equipment Room
• The Equipment Room is a facility which houses
items of more complexity such as:
▫ Telephone related equipment such as an MDF
(Main Distribution Frame), PBX’s (Private Branch
Exchange), secondary voltage protection, and the
like.
▫ Networking equipment such as switches, hubs,
routers, servers, etc., although a separate but
connected computer room is usual.

17
Equipment Room Size
• The rule of thumb is 0.75 square feet of floor
space for every 100 square feet of user area.

• Recommendation:

# Workstations ER Floor Space (ft2)


1-100 150
101-400 400
401-800 800
801-1,200 1,200
18
Equipment Room Details
• It should be accessible for delivery of large items
but shall not be used as access to other rooms or
facilities.

• It should contain a wall with ¾ inch plywood.


Equipment Room Guidelines
• Away from sources of electromagnetic
interference
• Avoid sources of flooding
• All surfaces should be treated to reduce dust and
there should be no false ceilings
• Should have limited access (36” X 80” single or
double lockable doors)
• Humidity, temperature , lighting and electrical
considerations must be addressed.

20
Typical Telecom Room

Image Source: Anixter.com


Pathways
• Allowances must me
made for the
physical routing of
communication
cabling throughout
the building.

22 22
Cable Pathway Planning
• Building Pathways:
▫ Vertical & Horizontal cable pathways
 walls, ceiling, plenums, floors
▫ Exterior or interior

• Cable Pathway and Support Structures:


▫ Conduit, raceway, tray, duct, sleeves, etc
▫ J-Hook, clamps, cable shoes, waterfall, etc
Backbone Pathways
• Telecommunication Rooms should be stacked
vertically and 3, 4-inch conduit or other cable
pathways provided between these rooms.

• Firestopping is required between vertically


stacked rooms.

• For rooms that are not stacked they should be


connected with a minimum of 4 inch conduit. Fill
should not exceed 40%.
24
TIA/EIA 569A Conduit Systems
• Flexible metal tubing is not recognized
• Should not be more than 30 meters
▫ install a pull box for greater distances
• No more than two 90 degree bends
• Typical fill ratio between 30-60%, recommend
40% max
• Diameter of 4” min. should be used underground
▫ manholes within first 150 meters
▫ no more than 300 meters between manholes

25
Conduit (continued)
• Flexible metal tubing is not permitted

• Should not be longer than 30 meters


▫ install a pull box for greater distances

• 4” min. should be used underground


▫ manholes within first 150 meters
▫ no more than 300 meters between manholes
Architectural Masterformat
• The Masterformat is a reference document used by
architectural engineers when designing a building.

• The communication infrastructure is part of the


Masterformat under Division 27 (since 2004).

• Other cabling requirements have their own


division numbers:
▫ Security & safety (28)
▫ Electrical (26)
▫ Automation (25)
Conclusion
• The TIA/EIA 569-B is a structured cabling
standard that addresses the physical
requirements and design issues for pathways and
spaces for cable within a building.

• Since each building and installation has unique


challenges, the standard is frequently used as a
guideline and not the rule.

END

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