Download - NEDAS DC - November 29, 2016 Presentations
Meet the Panel
John Celentano Analyst/Consultant Skyline Marketing Group Moderator Ken Rehbehn Principal Analyst, Wireless Infrastructure 451 Research
Chris Wixom Sr. Director-Strategic Accounts Corning Dominic Villecco President V-COMM
• Mobile broadband traffic – Growth continues, but does capex?
• Internet of Things expands – Not just an outdoor need
• Small cell role – Is it breakout time?
• 5G hype grows – But focus is on fixed for now
General
Technology Trends Impacting the In-building Wireless Market
• Voice over Wi-Fi – Filling gaps, but is it sufficient?
• LTE Licensed Assisted Access – Expanding LTE spectrum with unlicensed
• MulteFire – New opportunity for neutral host systems?
• CBRS – New spectrum, new players?
Unlicensed and shared spectrum
Technology Trends Impacting the In-building Wireless Market
• E911 indoor location – Addressing the Z-axis
• FirstNet – Bringing LTE to the service of first responders
Emergency services
Technology Trends Impacting the In-building Wireless Market
Presenter Presented by Skyline Marke7ng Group
John Celentano Wireless Market Analyst/MarkeBng Consultant
U.S. Commercial Buildings Installed Base
Source: EIA-CBECS, 2012, our estimates © 2016. Skyline Marketing Group. All rights reserved.
Tier 1 [8,000]
Tier 2 [128,000]
Tier 3 [199,000]
Tier 4 [5,222,000]
500,000+ sf <885,000 sf>
100,000-500,000 sf <210,000 sf>
50,000-100,000 sf <70,000 sf>
Under 50,000 sf <16,000 sf>
IBW Complexity
Hi
Lo
Total = 5.6 million buildings
U.S. Middleprise IBW Market Outlook
© 2016. Skyline Marketing Group. All rights reserved.
http://www.aglmediagroup.com/sizing-the-in-building-wireless-systems-market/
Open Fiber Based Platform
In-Building is About
Connectivity
8x Increase in Mobile Traffic by
2020
Drives Bandwidth Needs
Technology Disruption will only Increase
Multiple Applications – ONE Platform
Cellular
VzW AT&T/ Sprint
T-Mobile
WiFi
Cisco Aruba
Extreme/Ruckus
LAN
Cisco/Juniper HP/Brocade
Tellabs/Zhone
BMS
JCI Honeywell Schneider
Delivering Convergence Today: 220 Central Park South
• 65 Floors – 150 Units – 500K SqFt • Cellular Connectivity – including the elevators • Fiber Support for:
• Triple-Play Services • Wi-Fi where needed • Security Cameras • Building Automation
© 2016 Corning Incorporated
IBW Deployment Considerations
• Since 4G LTE, capacity is a bigger driver than coverage • 4G LTE data growth >100% year over year - cannot grow the
network at same rate • “Cell Edge” problem must be managed to grow network • Signal to Noise ratio is key for increased throughput/capacity • Offloading existing network with closer proximity network is key
to increasing capacity • “Middle-prise” buildings must keep costs in check, to maintain
viability of in-building systems – cannot keep building the same way
Jeff Just
COO, Bandwidth Logic
Jason Nelson ExecuBve Director, Partnership Engagement, Smart CiBes Council
Robert LeGrande Owner, The Digital Decision, LLC
Steve Yapsuga Senior Business Development ExecuBve, VAR Market, TESSCO
Smart Cities: definition, challenges, potential
Moderator : John Foley OperaBng ExecuBve
Innova7ng the In-‐Building Business Model
Bo White, Director, Business Development, Sentry Financial Corporation Ray Hild, Area Vice President, JMA Wireless Alex Ajdelsztajn, Sr. Manager of IT in the Americas Region, Marriott International Joe Koridek, Director National Sales and Business Development, CTS
Mike Collado Principal Consultant
5 Key Trends and How They’ll Impact the In-‐Building Wireless Ecosystem in 2017 (and Beyond)
5 Key Trends and How They’ll Impact the In-‐Building Wireless Ecosystem in 2017 (and Beyond)
Trend #1: 5G
Infrastructure and transport will play a pivotal role
Mike Collado Principal Consultant
5 Key Trends and How They’ll Impact the In-‐Building Wireless Ecosystem in 2017 (and Beyond)
Trend #3: Public Safety & Loca7on
Code requirements mean opportunity but regulatory nuances create challenges
5 Key Trends and How They’ll Impact the In-‐Building Wireless Ecosystem in 2017 (and Beyond) Tier 2 may be the “buzz” but Tier 1 is the “biz”
Trend #5: Tier 1 Venues
Trend When R&D MarkeBng Sales 5G >5 Years ✓
3.5 GHz 3 Years ✓ PS Now ✓ ✓ ✓
Tier 2 1.5 Years ✓ ✓ Tier 1 Now ✓ ✓
Timeframes & Stakeholder Focus
Presenter
Bob Langston ADRF
Regional Sales Manager
Public Safety Distributed Antenna Systems
Will Ruffin Vision Technologies
NaBonal Account Manager
I. What is Driving Public Safety DAS? II. NFPA Compliance III. Frequency Bands / Technologies IV. Case Studies
Agenda
Needs Analysis
Contac7ng the Local AHJ
NFPA 72 Fire Code Sec7on 500
Interpreta7on for Coverage and Tes7ng
PS DAS Requirements
Consider This: ❑ The Frequencies Required ❑ Coverage ❑ Design ❑ Passive vs AcGve System ❑ Fire RaGngs 2 hour | 4 Hour ❑ AestheGc and Architectural Requirements ❑ Working Hours: DayGme, AOer Hours ❑ Preferred Low Voltage Contractor ❑ Union/Non-‐Union Labor; Prevailing Wages
In-‐Building Coverage
Focus of AHJ -‐ Enforcement via Occupancy Permits
Building Owner’s Requirements It Depends on the Local Jurisdic7on
Improving Communica7ons
RegulaGons are driving the number of requirements for Public Safety DAS
Small facili7es <100K sq _
Medium to Large facili7es >100 and <200 sq _
Large facili7es >200 sq _
Providing Indoor Public Safety Coverage
• System Coverage: 99% coverage in criGcal areas designated by the local fire department
• -‐95 dB Minimum signal Strength: IFC and NFPA requires -‐95 dB of signal level regardless of the frequency
• NEMA-‐4 Enclosures: Dust, water, and corrosion-‐proof NEMA 4 compliant housing
• System Monitoring Alarms: to provide real-‐Gme monitoring of system’s readiness. Power/Ba\ery /Antenna /Equipment failure/ ba\ery charging
• Babery Backup: In case of main power failure (likely at a fire), 12/24 hours of run-‐Gme (minimum)
• Antenna Isola7on. NFPA sGpulates antenna isolaGon requirement of 15 dB higher than the gain of the amplifier.
• Class A or Class B Amplifier: channelized or wideband
NFPA -‐ Compliance
• Different DAS interpretaGons to the naGonal codes (NFPA, IFC) by AHJ
• Code is becoming wiser across all regions
NFPA
• VHF: 136 – 174 MHz • UHF: 380 – 512 MHz • Channels vary by locaGon and project • Need to keep UL and DL isolated
Keep UL and DL on separate coaxial paths and antennas Use custom duplexers/mulGplexers with high isolaGon
VHF and UHF
700C 700PS 700C 700PS 800PS 800C Cell 800PS 800C Cell
DL DL UL UL UL UL DL DL
746-757 758-775 776-787 788-805 806-817 817-824 824-849 851-862 862-869 869-894
• DL of one frequency band showing up as UL of an adjacent band (7PDL/7FUL, CUL/S8DL) • Bandpass Filters required at Remote Modules
• Typically separate remotes required • Keep adjacent frequency bands on separate paths from HE-‐>RU • Use hybrid coupler with high isolaGon to combine (30dB)
700 + 800 MHz Commercial and Public Safety
• LTE E-‐UTRA Band • FDD Frequency band • Uplink 788-‐798 MHz • Downlink 758-‐768 MHz • Great indoor penetraGon being a lower band
700 MHz Band 14
• Future Frequency Changes: Need to support future frequency requirement. IFC and NFPA promote equipment that supports VHF, UHF 700 and 800 MHz
• SelecGon of products that already cover from VHF to 800 will provide savings in the future
• Choose products that are “modula7on agnos7c” modulaGon techniques can change in the future
• Single mode fiber is preferred among DAS acGve soluGons
Future Bands and Technologies
DAS
QuesGons to ask: • Frequencies: Does it support Commercial & PS bands -‐ 134 MHz to 2690 MHz?
• Modularity: Does the equipment support commercial and public safety on the same system?
• Expandability: Can I pay for bands that I need now and easily upgrade in the future?
• Does it have filtering opGons to miGgate interference?
Off Air Repeater
QuesGons to ask: • Frequencies: Does it support bands -‐ 700/800 MHz and VHF/UHF?
• Is it NFPA Compliant? • Does it offer NEMA 4X compliant enclosure suitable for both indoor and outdoor environments?
• Does it have filtering opGons to miGgate interference?
Public Safety Product Lines
• Located in Washington D.C. • 290K Square Feet Coverage Area
• LEED Silver Design • Police and EMS Staff • Radio Service Required
Tenants and Visitors require robust public safety service
Site A: Consolidated Forensic Laboratory (CFL)
DAS HEADEND Public Safety Repeater
DAS REMOTE DAS REMOTE
3rd Floor East 1st Floor West 4th Floor West
DAS and Repeater Installa7on Photos
• 700 MHz, 800MHz, and UHF Support • Only PS repeater NEMA4X-‐rated, due to budget • Ambient coverage ➔ parGal DAS • No ba\ back-‐up ➔ building already has centralized back-‐up power
• Coordinate with AHJ, walk tesGng ➔ frequencies? VHF, UHF, 700MHz (Band 14?), 800 MHz, and 900MHz
• NEMA4X-‐rated? (typically) • Alarming ➔ Dry contacts ➔ FACP or auto-‐dialer • Ba\ery Back-‐Up ➔ 12hrs/24hrs • Separate coax infrastructure? • DAS deployment in phases? • PS DAS ➔ addiGonal Commercial layer (separate fiber)
DAS Requirements ‘to live by’
Thank You. For more informaGon, contact [email protected] AND [email protected] 866-‐746-‐1122 | 410.424.2208 h\p://www.visiontech.biz | h\p://www.DAS-‐Cell.com
Moderator: Mike Rosato Vice President, Strategic Accounts-‐GIANT SoluBons
*********** Rene Pachinbhayag
In-‐Building SoluBons Manager-‐ AT&T Mobile and Business SoluBons
Cris Kimbrough Managing Director-‐CBRE
Kevin Kurz
Wireless Manager South/Mid-‐AtlanBc-‐ Anixter, Inc.
Frank DesBto Director-‐Enterprise Accounts-‐ SOLID
Real World Perspec7ves on Enterprise DAS
Presented by: Scoj Gregory Director of MarkeBng -‐ SOLiD
Strategies for Dealing with Aging DAS Infrastructure
2017 Event Dates - February 15, 2017 – NEDAS Philly Social - April 18, 2017 – NEDAS Spring In-Building Wireless Summit - July 12, 2017 – NEDAS Boston Symposium - October 18, 2017 – NEDAS Fall In-Building Wireless Summit Seminar Series - December 13, 2016 – NEDAS Seminar presented by Perfect-10 - January 19, 2017 – NEDAS 2017 Seminar Series #1 - March 23, 2017 – NEDAS 2017 Seminar Series #2 - May 18, 2017 - NEDAS 2017 Seminar Series #3 - July 6, 2017 - NEDAS 2017 Seminar Series #4 - September 28, 2017 - NEDAS 2017 Seminar Series #5 - November 16, 2017 - NEDAS 2017 Seminar Series #6
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