/ DAS
JB Technologies · Tampa, FL · Healthcare Facilities

Distributed Antenna Systems for Healthcare Facilities in Tampa

Multi-carrier DAS for Tampa General, Moffitt Cancer Center, AdventHealth Tampa, and BayCare's Bay-area medical campuses.

Commercial distributed antenna system installation by JB Technologies — Tampa, FL
JB Technologies recognized as a certified Nextivity Pro Partner for DAS installation
JB Technologies is a certified Nextivity Pro Partner — we design, install, and commission CEL-FI QUATRA active DAS and passive DAS systems for commercial cellular coverage.

DAS Installation Services for Healthcare Facilities in Tampa

Tampa General Hospital on Davis Islands, Moffitt Cancer Center on the USF campus, AdventHealth Tampa on Bruce B. Downs, and BayCare's St. Joseph's flagship anchor a Bay Area healthcare network with extreme exposure to both storm surge and hurricane wind. Davis Islands in particular is a low-elevation island campus that floods quickly and depends on continuity-of-operations design at every utility layer, DAS included. JB Technologies designs Tampa healthcare DAS with head-end placement above base flood elevation, hardened outdoor coax runs, and active head-end battery autonomy sized for sustained Gulf-Coast carrier macro outages.

Local context — Tampa, FL

Tampa General on Davis Islands is the textbook case for storm-resilient healthcare DAS: a level-1 trauma center sitting on a low-elevation island where Hurricane Ian and Idalia both forced operational reviews and where elevator-machine-room and basement-radiology head-end placement is not viable. Active head-ends here go above base flood elevation by design, with conduit routes that avoid the lowest two floors entirely. Moffitt's USF-adjacent campus has a different problem — the H. Lee Moffitt tower's radiation-treatment vaults force tight RF-discipline around the linear accelerators and proton-therapy bunker, where stray BDA energy at the wrong band is unacceptable. AdventHealth Tampa on Bruce B. Downs and BayCare's St. Joseph's add the Westshore-area I-275 carrier-density picture: workable outdoors, marginal indoors in older concrete wings.

Why Choose JB Technologies for DAS in Tampa?


What is DAS?

A Distributed Antenna System (DAS) is an engineered network of indoor antennas that distributes commercial cellular signal throughout a building so that tenants, employees, and visitors get reliable voice and data coverage on Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile. DAS solves the in-building coverage problem in two architectures. Passive DAS uses a donor antenna on the roof feeding a bi-directional amplifier and a coax-and-splitter distribution grid — cost-effective for buildings under roughly 150,000 square feet with a usable outdoor donor signal. Active DAS converts RF to digital at a head-end and distributes over fiber to remote units, scaling cleanly to multi-million-square-foot venues and supporting all major carriers through carrier-grade signal sources. When the outdoor donor is strong and the building is mid-sized, a single-carrier CEL-FI QUATRA deployment is often the right answer; when the donor is weak, the building is large, or true multi-carrier parity is needed, an active DAS is the durable choice.

Where DAS makes sense

DAS is owner- and tenant-driven — it is the answer to "why does my phone drop calls inside this building?" rather than a building-code mandate. Typical DAS candidates:

  1. Large floor plates — offices, hospitals, and campuses over roughly 50,000 sq ft where a single booster cannot cover the area.
  2. Dense concrete or steel construction — hardened cores and rebar-heavy slabs attenuate cellular signal 15–25 dB.
  3. Impact-rated or low-E glass — modern energy-efficient and hurricane-impact glazing attenuates PCS and AWS bands 10–18 dB.
  4. Multi-carrier requirements — tenants and visitors on Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile all need parity coverage.
  5. Below-grade and parking levels — basements, parking decks, and tunnels where macro signal does not penetrate.
  6. Healthcare facilities — nurse-call workflows, BYOD clinical apps, and patient-experience requirements.
  7. Hotels and mixed-use towers — in-room and amenity-floor cellular is a guest-experience expectation.
  8. Warehouses and distribution centers — metal-clad envelopes and dock-door geometry that block macro signal.
  9. Higher-education buildings — libraries, residence halls, and student centers with dense user counts.
  10. Stadiums, arenas, and conference venues — capacity-driven deployments, not just coverage.

Typical system costs.

DAS pricing varies with building size, donor-signal strength, carrier mix, and design topology. Two rough ranges hold across most commercial work:

Installed Cost Ranges

Permitting and Carrier Coordination

Commissioning and Ongoing Support

Key Takeaways

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Building address and a rough floor plate is enough to start. We'll respond within one business day with a probable DAS topology, donor-signal expectations, and a budget range.

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