The network is the building's nervous system.
Audio rides on it. Cameras ride on it. The POS, the door locks, the guest who's mid-video-call by the pool — all on the same wires. We design, supply and install venue-grade networks on UniFi and MikroTik: roaming Wi-Fi, structured cabling, fiber backbones, and a guest network that can't see your accounting.
TAS.AC designs, supplies and installs venue networks in Bali and Indonesia: high-density roaming Wi-Fi, managed switching and routing (UniFi / MikroTik), fiber backbones, VLAN segmentation and failover — quoted per property by size and device count, handed over fully documented.
Five layers,
one system.
Access points & Wi-Fi.
High-density, roaming-capable APs placed by survey, not by guesswork — sized to concurrent devices, not floor area, so a phone walks from lobby to pool deck without dropping the call.
Switching & routing.
Managed UniFi and MikroTik, VLAN-segmented: guest, staff, AV, CCTV and back-of-house on separate networks that share hardware but not visibility. The difference between a network you can diagnose and a box you reboot and pray.
Fiber backbone.
For resorts and multi-building sites, a fiber ring beats a copper run in both bandwidth and lightning survival. Bali's storms make that second point less theoretical than it sounds.
Structured cabling.
Labeled, documented, terminated properly. The invisible half of every "why is the Wi-Fi bad" ticket is cabling nobody can trace.
Failover & protection.
Dual-WAN where uptime pays for it, surge protection everywhere — one dead ISP shouldn't kill the venue on a Saturday night.
Four steps,
no folklore.
Survey. Walls, distances, interference, device counts at peak — measured on site, not assumed from a floor plan.
Design. AP positions, switch layout, VLAN plan: guest, staff, CCTV, audio-over-IP and payments each on their own segment. Capacity for the busiest night, not the average Tuesday.
Configure. Roaming tuned so devices hand over between APs without dropping; bandwidth shaped so one villa guest's torrent doesn't eat the restaurant's card terminal.
Document & hand over. Network map, device list, credentials — yours from day one. Any competent engineer can pick it up from the documentation. Nothing is locked to us.
Boxes are
half the job.
A UniFi access point from us costs about what it costs anywhere — we won't pretend otherwise. What you're buying on top is the design: channel planning so APs don't fight each other, VLANs so a guest can't browse to your NVR, failover so one dead ISP doesn't take the venue down. That configuration is documented and handed over — passwords included, from day one.
Why it's on the same
site as speakers.
Modern venue audio is network traffic — Dante zones, streaming sources, control panels all live on the LAN. So do the cameras and the POS. A network designed by whoever was cheapest that month is how a beach club ends up with music dropouts every full house. When one team designs the network and the systems on it, the finger-pointing stops before it starts. Audio → · CCTV →
From property
to number.
Send the property: plan or address, building count, rough peak headcount, and what's failing now if something is. You get back a surveyed design — AP and switch counts, backbone plan — and an itemized quote with stock status per position. The number we quote is the number we invoice. Tax invoice (faktur pajak) issued as standard.
Questions venue
owners ask.
Tell us where
it hurts.
Dead zones, dropped calls, one router doing the work of nine — describe it or send a floor plan. You get back a design, a device count and a number that holds.