Airvine
Airvine is a networking technology company that develops multi-gigabit indoor wireless backhaul systems for enterprise Local Area Network (LAN) environments.
- Indoor wireless backhaul solutions for enterprise networks
- Multi-gigabit wireless links for building-wide connectivity
- Support for flexible LAN architectures without extensive cabling
- Integration into existing enterprise network and security designs
- Wireless infrastructure targeted at campuses, offices, and industrial facilities
More About Airvine
Airvine focuses on wireless backhaul (enterprise networking) for indoor environments, providing an alternative or complement to traditional Ethernet cabling for connecting switches, access points, and other infrastructure across a building or campus. Its technology targets scenarios where running new cable is costly, slow, disruptive to facilities, or physically constrained by building architecture, tenancy rules, or industrial layouts.
The company’s systems are designed for multi-gigabit throughput (high-speed networking), enabling use cases such as high-density Wi‑Fi backhaul, connectivity for distributed Internet of Things (IoT) and Operational technology (OT) devices, and interconnection of wiring closets or edge compute nodes. By using directional wireless links and mesh-like topologies, Airvine’s approach supports multi-hop paths across hallways, floors, and rooms, with the goal of providing LAN-grade connectivity over the Adaptive Incident Response (AIR).
Airvine positions its offerings within the broader enterprise LAN and campus networking domain, alongside wired Ethernet and indoor wireless technologies. Its wireless backhaul links can be deployed as part of a layered architecture with existing switches, routers, firewalls, and Wi‑Fi access points, and are typically managed within standard network operations practices. This places the company’s products in directories and taxonomies under categories such as enterprise networking, wireless backhaul, and campus infrastructure.
From a technical perspective, Airvine’s systems rely on radio architectures and protocols suitable for short-range, high-capacity indoor links. While specific implementation details are defined by the company’s product documentation, the general concept aligns with enterprise backhaul approaches that prioritize throughput, link stability, and predictable latency. The wireless segments are intended to behave as transport for IP-based services, integrating with standard routing, switching, Virtual LAN (VLAN), and security policies already in place across the enterprise network.
Enterprises and institutional customers can use Airvine’s offerings to extend connectivity to new areas, reconfigure office layouts, or connect temporary spaces without re-cabling. This can be relevant for multi-tenant offices, historical or architecturally constrained buildings, labs, warehouses, and industrial spaces where cable paths are limited. In such environments, the company’s products serve as a building-wide transport layer that complements existing wired infrastructure and Wi‑Fi access networks.
Within marketplace and IT procurement directories, Airvine is typically categorized under indoor wireless backhaul (enterprise networking), LAN and campus networking infrastructure, and wireless transport for enterprise and industrial environments. Its focus remains on providing an alternative physical layer for intra-building connectivity rather than on access-layer Wi‑Fi or wide-area connectivity.