PacketScout local Ekahau survey

Miami Ekahau and Hamina WiFi Site Survey

Ekahau and Hamina survey support for Miami tenant floors, hospitality areas, high-density commercial spaces, PortMiami and MIA cargo-adjacent sites, and buildings where glass, concrete, and scale accuracy change the RF picture.

Scale first
Tenant drawings, elevator cores, risers, and demising walls are checked before heatmaps become decision material.
Density zones
Lobby seating, conference rooms, amenity areas, retail fronts, and back-of-house paths get scoped by use.
Cargo edges
Loading doors, stockrooms, docks, and outdoor handoffs can be included when they affect operations.

Quick answer: PacketScout can collect Ekahau or Hamina data in Miami spaces where floor plan scale, dense client use, glass/concrete construction, or cargo/service paths need proof before AP moves, cabling, acceptance, or remediation work.

Map and scale before heatmaps

Miami multi-tenant buildings can make a clean report misleading when the drawing is wrong. PacketScout checks known distances, suite boundaries, shared corridors, elevator banks, risers, and ceiling conditions before survey data is used to guide AP placement.

If the plan is old or missing detail, the report can call that out. Map notes matter because an AP recommendation can shift into the wrong suite, behind the wrong wall, or across a glass line when the scale is off.

If the team already has a Hamina design or predictive model, PacketScout can use it as the starting question list, then compare it against what the Miami walk shows in tenant glass, concrete cores, riser areas, loading paths, and hospitality zones.

High density commercial and hospitality zones

Commercial towers
Conference rooms, tenant corridors, elevator banks, and glass office fronts can create sharp quality changes.
Hospitality and amenities
Lobbies, public seating, meeting rooms, pool or terrace entrances, storage, and back-of-house spaces may need separate passes.
Service paths
Staff counters, security desks, receiving, and shared corridors often explain complaints missed by a lobby-only walk.

Port, airport cargo, and service-area paths

PortMiami and MIA cargo-adjacent scopes can include metal shelving, dock doors, carts, handheld devices, high ceilings, and indoor-to-outdoor transitions. The survey path should follow the routes used by scanners, tablets, warehouse staff, or service teams.

  • Receiving, stock, dispatch, loading, and security areas can be included when they affect the wireless requirement.
  • RSSI, SNR, noise, channel overlap, AP cell size, and roaming boundaries are reviewed in the spaces that matter.
  • The value is measured data tied to Miami building conditions, not a generic lobby-only walkthrough.

Miami scoping labels

A Miami survey brief may label zones as a Brickell tenant suite, Downtown lobby mezzanine, Doral or Medley stock area, MIA cargo office edge, PortMiami service corridor, condo amenity deck, valet stand, restaurant point-of-sale area, or bayfront tower elevator bank. Those labels help separate polished public space from service corridors, secure cores, loading paths, and tenant-controlled access.

For high-rise work, practical notes can include freight-elevator scheduling, security desk check-in, shared riser rooms, property-management approval, and windows when common areas are accessible.

Report handoff

The Miami report can separate scale issues, glass or concrete coverage gaps, SNR/noise problems, roaming boundaries, and owner-specific fixes. Some items belong to IT or an MSP; others may require low-voltage work, facilities access, vendor correction, or a new cabling plan.

FAQ

Can you survey one Miami tenant floor?

Yes. The scope can focus on one suite or floor while accounting for shared corridors, elevator banks, neighboring RF, and access limits that affect the result.

What if the floor plan is incomplete?

Send the best version available. PacketScout can verify known dimensions where possible and document plan uncertainty in the report.

Can public and staff WiFi be reviewed together?

Yes, if both use cases are part of the scope. Public areas, service rooms, counters, storage, and back-of-house paths should be identified before the walk.

Can the report support vendor acceptance?

Yes. Post install validation can document measured coverage, quality, roaming behavior, and corrections needed before acceptance.

Need measured data before a Miami wireless decision?

Use the managed survey workflow page, or the general WiFi survey page for broader onsite RF support.