Home > Midmarket CIO News > Arts center's network infrastructure hits right note with Wi-Fi, FMC
Midmarket CIO News:
EMAIL THIS

Arts center's network infrastructure hits right note with Wi-Fi, FMC

By Elisabeth Horwitt, Contributor
04 Nov 2008 | SearchCIO-Midmarket.com

Technology news and tips for midmarket CIOs
Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google

As director of IS at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts of Miami-Dade County, James J. Thompson had landed a job most IT executives would kill for. He would be overseeing the build out of a network infrastructure for a brand-new, state-of-the-art facility with -- this was the kicker -- awesome capital funding that was "almost unprecedented for a nonprofit art organization," he said.

More on UC, FMC for CIOs
FMC saves firms costly mobile phone charges

CIOs grapple with tying Wi-Fi, VoIP into unified communications plan
There was just one caveat: His $2.5 million budget was a one-shot, "use it or lose it" deal, part of the $472 million that donors had raised over a 25-year period to build the center.

Thompson did what any savvy CIO would do: He used every penny and overprovisioned network capacity, big time. "I had to provide for the future," he said. "While I had the money, I wanted to put something in place that would last a decade or more. I didn't want to have to replace those core switches or the phone system in five or eight years." As a nonprofit art organization, a performing arts center is a luxury item, the first thing donors cut out of their budgets when times get tough -- as now, for instance.

Thompson's strategy makes particular sense for midrange firms with small IT budgets and little fat to live off of in lean times, according to Phil Redman, a research vice president at Gartner Inc. in Stamford, Conn. In the next year or so, midmarket IT executives will "do what they have to do" to maintain critical applications and services, "but they won't do major revamps unless they absolutely have to."

The center's wired network comprises two 3Com 10 Gbps core switches, multigigabit links between the cores and wiring closets, and gigabit-per-second links to the desktop. While Thompson has not measured bandwidth utilization, there have been no signs of congestion and no outages in the two years since the center came online, he said.

Ensuring enough bandwidth, while critical, was just one piece of Thompson's vision for the networking infrastructure. Formerly the IT director at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center, he is well-acquainted with the communications needs of the performers, contractors, technicians and audience members who visit the center. He used his funding windfall to address those needs on a level that is unusual if not unique in the world of performing arts.

For example, audiences can view opera translations on screens installed on seatbacks. An engineer sitting in the lighting booth can communicate via mobile phone with directors and production people watching lighting effects onstage. Actors can call home from their dressing rooms. Audience members milling about in the lobby can surf the Web on their BlackBerrys.

Accomplishing all of this was not without challenges, Thompson acknowledged.

Starting from scratch with brand-new buildings simplified things somewhat: no need to integrate new systems with old ones, rip out old wiring or depreciate old equipment. With the exception of a Nortel private branch exchange and a BlackBerry RIM server, 3Com Corp. supplied all the networking equipment, which "gave us ease of integration and unified management tools," Thompson said. 3Com was chosen because "they gave us good bang for the buck compared with other major manufacturers."

While I had
the money, I wanted to put something in place that would last a decade or more.

James J. Thompson
director of IS, Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts
The "quirky" artistic nature of the buildings posed a few connectivity problems, however, Thompson noted. His team had to install 26 wiring closets around the campus, to get around "strange angles" that made wiring difficult. The architect didn't want unsightly outlets in the lobby walls, so Thompson's team had to install Wi-Fi in the ceiling.

Furthermore, there are a number of areas, like performers' dressing rooms, where cell phone service can't reach. Thompson solved the problem by installing a fixed-mobile communications system that enables mobile devices to receive both Wi-Fi and cellular service.

Security was also a concern, given that audience members, contractors and other outsiders use the same wireless network as in-house staff members. 3Com's wireless access points use ID authentication to assign different user groups to different virtual LANs, ensuring that only staff members can access internal databases and other sensitive material.

Was all that trouble and expense worth it? The center's near-ubiquitous communications services definitely make productions run more smoothly, Thompson said. Further, they heighten the audience's experience and please employees, he added. Whether that translates into bigger box-office numbers remains unclear, however.

On the other hand, the center is starting to see increased revenues from hosting business conferences, for which reliable, anywhere network access is a necessity, not a perk. Connectivity was the main reason a British company chose the center as its venue for a conference on next-generation website programming, Thompson said. "They told us about 600 people would be attending the keynote, most of them with iPhones or laptops. We said, 'No problem.'"

Elisabeth Horwitt is a contributing writer based in Waban, Mass. Write to her at editor@searchcio-midmarket.com.



Tags: Mobile technology for the midmarketEmail and messaging for the midmarketRemote connectivity for the midmarketVIEW ALL TAGS

Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google



RELATED CONTENT
Mobile technology for the midmarket
Droid does, but will IT support it?
Virtualization management strategies ezine for CIOs
Midmarket data center management guides: Tips and best practices
Information technology management e-book downloads for midmarket CIOs
2008 top 10 technology articles: Social media, Vista, IT salaries
FAQ: What is unified communications, and why would I want it?
Mobile unified communications options for the midmarket
Top five technology trends -- and why you should give thanks
When Microsoft shuts you down and other IT horror stories
CIOs, unified communications and the lost art of conversation

Email and messaging for the midmarket
Midmarket data center management guides: Tips and best practices
CIO's cost-cutting measures include move to Gmail
Midmarket firm harnesses email communication as part of disaster plan
When Microsoft shuts you down and other IT horror stories
CIOs, unified communications and the lost art of conversation
Fixed-mobile convergence saves firms costly mobile phone charges
CIOs grapple with tying Wi-Fi, VoIP into unified communications plan
Unified communications: Savvy business move or security meltdown?
Unified communications security: How safe is it?
An IT spring cleaning for CIOs

Remote connectivity for the midmarket
Midmarket data center management guides: Tips and best practices
9 steps to business continuity strategy: Remote access solutions, more
How to build a remote-site disaster recovery plan -- a CIO's advice
Unified communications plans should tap CIO
Forrester: IT industry demands better collaborative, integrated data
Broadband Wi-Fi access a community dream
Augusta latest city to try out municipal Wi-Fi
Consumer smartphones pushing midmarket CIOs to adopt (news podcast)
IPhone: CIOs ponder personal tech toys in the office
RIM targets midsized firms with easier-to-use PDA software

RELATED GLOSSARY TERMS
Terms from Whatis.com − the technology online dictionary
USB  (SearchCIO-Midmarket.com)

RELATED RESOURCES
2020software.com, trial software downloads for accounting software, ERP software, CRM software and business software systems
Search Bitpipe.com for the latest white papers and business webcasts
Whatis.com, the online computer dictionary



Midmarket CIO Technology Advisor
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  For Advertisers  |  For Business Partners  |  Site Index  |  RSS
SEARCH 
TechTarget provides technology professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective purchase decisions and managing their organizations' technology projects - with its network of technology-specific websites, events and online magazines.

TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Site Map




All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2007 - 2009, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
  TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts