MDU Fiber Lock Box & Secure Enclosure Installation | ASI Fiber Group
MDU Fiber Installation

MDU Fiber Lock Boxes and Secure Network Enclosures

Carrier-grade lock box and network enclosure installation that protects equipment, controls access, and keeps building owners satisfied. Installed to spec across the NY Metro and Northeast.

10M+Feet of Fiber Placed
200K+Homes Passed & Tested
30+Years Combined Leadership
99.9%First-Call Resolution Rate

What We Do

Equipment Protection and Access Control From the First Day

Lock boxes and secure network enclosures are the hardware that keeps a building's fiber network protected after the construction crew leaves. They house the termination equipment, splice trays, and distribution hardware that sit at the center of the network, and they provide the access control that lets the carrier service the network without requiring building management to accompany every technician visit.

ASI installs lock boxes and network enclosures as part of the complete MDU fiber build, sized and positioned to match the carrier's equipment requirements and the building's physical constraints. We work with the project engineer's specifications and coordinate with the building owner on placement to make sure access is practical for the carrier's maintenance crews long after the build is complete.

Enclosure placement, cable organization inside the enclosure, and labeling are all part of what we deliver. The carrier's activation team shouldn't have to guess what's inside the box or why it's mounted where it is.

"The enclosure is the first thing the carrier's tech sees on a service call. Make it right."

Lock Boxes & Enclosures at a Glance

What ASI brings to the secure access phase of your MDU fiber build.

Lock box installation at riser distribution points and equipment rooms
Network enclosures sized to carrier equipment specifications
Interior cable organization and labeling within each enclosure
Placement coordinated with building owner and carrier access requirements
Secure mounting to wall, floor, or structural surface as required
Documentation of enclosure locations and contents at project closeout
Talk to Our Team

How We Approach It

Lock Box and Enclosure Installation Process

Enclosure work looks straightforward. The details matter more than they appear. Here's how ASI handles it.

01

Equipment and Placement Review

Enclosure type, size, and mounting location are confirmed against the carrier's equipment specs and the building's physical layout before any hardware is ordered or staged. Surprises at installation are expensive, and we eliminate them upfront.

02

Building Owner Coordination

Placement decisions that affect building common areas or mechanical rooms are discussed with the property manager before installation. Lock box locations affect building operations for years, and we make sure they work for the building as well as the carrier.

03

Mounting and Securing

Enclosures are mounted securely to the appropriate surface, with proper hardware for the wall or floor type. A lock box that vibrates loose or isn't level creates a bad impression and a maintenance headache. We mount it right the first time.

04

Internal Cable Organization

Cables entering the enclosure are organized, managed, and labeled inside the box. A technician opening the enclosure on a service call years after installation should be able to understand what's there without having to trace every run.

05

Handoff Documentation

Enclosure locations, mounted equipment, and internal cable organization are documented at project closeout. The carrier and building owner both receive records that reflect what was actually installed.

Why It Matters

What's Inside the Box Determines How Serviceable the Network Is

A network that's hard to service becomes a network that's serviced poorly, and a network that's serviced poorly becomes a building owner complaint about the carrier. The lock box and enclosure work that ASI installs is built with the carrier's maintenance crews in mind, not just the construction milestone.

That perspective comes from our leadership team's background at the carrier level. They've been the technician opening that box on a service call. They know what a well-organized enclosure looks like versus what a field crew improvises at the end of a long build, and we build to the former standard regardless of project pressure.

What We're Known For

  • Carrier-grade organization. Enclosure interiors are organized the way a carrier tech expects to find them, not just technically acceptable.
  • Placement that works for the building. We consider building operations, not just cable routing, when selecting enclosure locations. Property managers notice.
  • Legible labeling. Every cable entering an enclosure is labeled at the connection point. No tracing, no guessing on a service call three years later.
  • Accurate closeout records. Enclosure locations and contents are documented and delivered so both the carrier and building owner have a record that matches what's actually installed.

Ready to Talk About Your MDU Project?

Whether you're scoping a single building or a portfolio of properties, ASI is available for a direct conversation about scope and timeline.