Wireless Bridges

Skip the trench.

When fiber between two buildings means tearing up a parking lot or going under a road, a point-to-point wireless bridge usually gets you the same thing in a couple of hours instead of a couple of weeks. We've put them up across parking lots, between farm buildings, out to oilfield offices, and to cameras at the back of the lot.


What a wireless bridge actually does

It’s a pair of radios — one on each building — that act like an Ethernet cable connecting them through the air. The user on the far side gets the same file shares, printers, phones, and WiFi as the main building, as if there were a wire running between them.

We use bridges for:

  • Building-to-building office links across a campus or strip mall.
  • Outbuildings — warehouses, garages, sheds, secondary offices.
  • Cameras and access control mounted away from the main building.
  • Temporary sites during construction or relocation.
  • Across a road or railroad when digging a trench isn’t practical.

What we install

We size the radios to the actual distance and to whether you have a clear view from one building to the other. For most short and mid-range links, mainstream Ubiquiti gear is the right answer. For long-distance, mission-critical, or interference-prone links, we step up to industrial-grade radios.


Why one vendor for the bridge and the network

A bridge isn’t just a radio — it carries your real network across, which means it needs the same segmentation, security, and monitoring as everything else. We design the link as part of the network it’s joining, not as a one-off radio install. If the bridge drops at 2 AM, the alert hits us the same way every other network device does.


Talk to us

Tell us the distance between the two points, whether there’s a clear line of sight, and what you’re trying to carry across. That’s usually enough to scope a starting answer.

Request a consultation →  ·  [email protected]