The questions ownership and operations teams ask most often when evaluating a managed connectivity platform.
No. Small cell nodes install on building exteriors, rooftops, and common area structures. No in-unit access is required. Most deployments complete without any disruption to residents' daily lives.
LayerLink Networks monitors the network 24/7 with proactive fault detection. Most issues are identified and resolved remotely before residents notice. For physical issues, a field team is dispatched on a priority basis under the managed service agreement.
In a bulk internet program, connectivity is included as a property amenity, similar to water or trash service. Residents are not required to maintain separate ISP contracts. This simplifies move-in and reduces churn friction.
From signed agreement to live network, most garden-style deployments complete in four to eight weeks depending on property size and local permitting requirements. The site survey and design phase begins immediately after agreement execution.
The network is wireless. Adding coverage to new amenity spaces, EV charging stations, or additional buildings requires only node placement and software configuration. No new wiring. No new construction. No tenant disruption.
Yes. LayerLink Networks uses network segmentation to isolate resident traffic from property management systems, security cameras, and IoT devices. Each logical network segment is independently secured and monitored.
The platform operates entirely on unlicensed spectrum, combining CBRS in General Authorized Access mode with Wi-Fi bands. No licensed spectrum agreements, no carrier negotiations, no spectrum complexity to manage.
The carriers contract directly with residents. Ownership captures none of the revenue. LayerLink Networks restructures the relationship so the property is in the middle, ownership participates in the connectivity revenue, and the platform is purpose-built for the unique coverage, security, and management requirements of multifamily communities.
A single managed service agreement covers the entire connectivity stack, deployment, operations, and resident support. One contract, one vendor, one point of accountability. Specific terms are tailored to property size and deployment scope.