Commercial TV Installation in Vaughan
Vaughan Metropolitan Centre corporate towers at the new VMC subway terminus, the Highway 7 west and Concord design-centre and showroom corridor, the Woodbridge Italian-Canadian banquet and wedding hall belt, the Vaughan Mills outlet mall, and the Highway 400 distribution-centre catchment — commercial TV installation in Vaughan handled by a licensed and insured, manufacturer-trained crew.
How do you install a boardroom TV inside a Vaughan Metropolitan Centre tower?
Inside a Vaughan Metropolitan Centre tower at Highway 7 and Jane Street, a commercial TV installation hub project on a new Class A floor runs on building-management rules rather than on a service-shift schedule. Most VMC office floors are still inside the developer’s original tenant-improvement envelope, so the install respects base-building cable pathways, fire-stopping standard, and slab-penetration rules, with after-hours freight access from the underground or ground-level loading area.
Vaughan Metropolitan Centre is the city’s first true transit-oriented commercial precinct, anchored by the VMC TTC subway station that opened on December 17, 2017 as the northern terminus of Line 1. The masterplan at Highway 7 and Jane Street is built around new Class A office towers — the KPMG Tower at 100 New Park Place, the PwC-YMCA Tower at 50 Interchange Way, the Miller Thomson office, the Vaughan Civic Centre, and a growing ring of further towers under construction. The result is that the typical VMC commercial-display brief is a boardroom or training room install inside a new-build floor plate, not a restaurant or storefront.
The install side differs from a Highway 404 head-office corridor floor in two ways. First, base-building cable pathways and structured cabling are still close to original — the install plan rides those pathways rather than improvising new ones, and slab penetrations are kept inside the developer’s fire-stopping standard so the tenant-improvement envelope is not disturbed. Second, freight access is from the underground or ground-level loading area through the building’s freight elevator, with the booking confirmed before the truck rolls and a single building-management contact named on the install method statement.
A typical VMC boardroom install scopes to a 75 to 98 inch commercial display or a dual-display front wall, a Microsoft Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms native bar (Logitech Rally Bar, Poly Studio, Yealink, or Neat), a ceiling microphone array, and a tabletop scheduler outside the door. Lobby-display work — a single ground-floor video wall behind the reception line, or a directory display beside the tenant elevator bank — is scoped separately because the property-manager approval path is different from a tenant-side boardroom install. A boardroom TV installation Vaughan project on a VMC floor is built to vendor reference architecture so the Teams or Zoom certification stays intact and the building-management envelope is respected.
Base-building cable pathways
The install plan rides the developer’s structured cabling and base-building pathways so the tenant-improvement envelope and fire-stopping standard are not disturbed.
Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms native
A certified video bar (Logitech Rally Bar, Poly Studio, Yealink, or Neat), a ceiling microphone array, and a tabletop scheduler — built to vendor reference architecture so the certification stays intact.
Freight access from the dock
75 to 98 inch displays move through the freight elevator from the underground or ground-level loading area — booked before the truck rolls and signed in with the building-management contact.
Lobby video walls scoped separately
Ground-floor lobby video walls and tenant-directory displays follow the property-manager approval path, not the tenant-side path — kept on a separate work order to keep the documentation clean.
How do you install a feature-wall display in a Highway 7 or Concord showroom?
On the Highway 7 west and Concord showroom corridor, a showroom display installer Vaughan brief is usually a single large-format commercial panel mounted as a feature wall at the entrance, a back-of-showroom product-loop display behind the consultation desk, and a video wall in the larger flagship rooms. The displays run a brand-mandated product-loop CMS through trading hours and ramp down overnight, so the panel choice is commercial-grade rather than consumer.
Highway 7 west between Jane Street and Highway 27 is the GTA’s densest design-centre and trade-showroom corridor, with the run continuing south into Concord around Highway 7 and Keele Street. The mix concentrates kitchen and cabinetry showrooms, stone and tile showrooms, Italian furniture, plumbing and lighting, and automotive-dealership row inside a few square kilometres. The brief at most of these rooms is the same shape: a feature display at the entrance to set the brand line, a back-of-room product-loop display behind the consultation table where samples are reviewed, and a larger video wall in the flagship rooms where a brand campaign is running. A clean wired backbone — the same backbone we install for Vaughan network installation — carries the signage feed without hopping over a guest Wi-Fi.
The display choice is the first decision. A commercial-grade panel — a Samsung commercial display installer Toronto brief typically reaches for Samsung QMR or QHR, LG UH5N or UH5F, Philips Q-Line, or NEC equivalent — handles a 12-hour daily duty cycle through a six-day retail week, runs an integrated content management system, and ships with a commercial warranty. A consumer TV in a Highway 7 showroom routinely fails inside the first year on a steady daytime duty cycle and the warranty is generally void in commercial use.
Mounting is the second decision. Kitchen and cabinetry rooms typically have feature walls finished in millwork or stone slab; the display ships on a low-profile flush mount, with cable paths inside the millwork cavity or behind the slab pre-furring rather than across a finished surface. Stone-and-tile rooms typically have feature walls finished in 10 to 20 mm porcelain or natural stone; the mount and the slab anchor are coordinated with the showroom’s installer so the slab is not stressed at the fixings.
Content is the third decision. Most showroom operators run a brand-mandated product-loop CMS — supplied by the cabinetry brand, the stone supplier, the appliance vendor, or the furniture brand — with the operator providing only the daypart and the local promo overlay. A digital signage installation Vaughan brief on this corridor therefore lives mostly inside the brand’s content workflow, not inside a third-party CMS sold separately. The install plan respects the brand pipeline rather than imposing a new one.
Feature wall at the entrance
A large-format commercial panel flush-mounted into the showroom’s feature wall — sized to the entry sightline and set to the brand line in product-loop mode.
Back-of-room product loop
A second commercial display behind the consultation desk running a brand-mandated product loop so samples on the table can be cross-referenced with on-screen detail.
Stone, tile, and millwork mounts
Mount and anchor coordinated with the showroom’s installer so 10 to 20 mm porcelain, natural stone slab, and millwork feature walls are not stressed at the fixings.
Brand-pipeline content
Most cabinetry, stone, appliance, and furniture brands ship product-loop content through their own pipeline — the install plan respects that pipeline rather than imposing a separate third-party CMS.
What does a commercial AV install look like for a Woodbridge banquet or wedding venue?
Along the Woodbridge banquet and wedding hall corridor on Highway 7 west, a banquet hall AV Woodbridge brief typically involves a large ceremony-room display or projection screen at the front, a video-wall or paired large-format displays in the main reception hall for the slideshow and live feed, and pre-function displays in the foyer for the schedule and table plan. The venues book Fridays, Saturdays, and many Sundays for service, so the realistic install window runs Monday through Thursday during the wedding season.
Woodbridge along Highway 7 west between Highway 27 and Pine Valley Drive concentrates one of the largest wedding and banquet venue belts in the GTA. The corridor is known for venues operating at scale: Paradise Banquet Hall on Highway 7, Le Jardin Conference and Event Venue on Caldari Road, Famee Furlane Banquet Hall, Terrace Banquet Centre, Riviera Parque, and the Vaughan Convention Centre among others. Each venue typically runs multiple ballrooms, a separate ceremony space, and a foyer or pre-function area, and each one has its own AV brief. Distributed audio on the ceremony and reception side often pairs with Sonos installation in Vaughan for amplified zones outside the main PA system.
The ceremony-space brief is typically a single large commercial display or a paired projection screen at the front of the room, fed by a live camera position at the back so guests at the rear can read the celebrant and the couple’s expressions. The display is on a fixed mount that respects the room’s millwork or the ceremony arch, with a cable path that does not cross the centre aisle.
The reception hall is the larger brief. A paired set of large-format commercial panels at the head table, a 2x2 or 3x3 LCD video wall along a feature wall (Samsung VHR or LG UH5F on a pop-out wall-mount system, calibrated for uniform colour and brightness), and a small distribution layer that routes a slideshow source, a live-camera source, and a brand-supplied content feed to whichever screen the venue needs at any moment. The mount choice and the cable path respect the venue’s chandeliers, ceiling drape, and finished ballroom walls.
The foyer brief is smaller — a single commercial display or a pair, running the schedule and the table plan, often on a stand or a hung mount rather than a wall fix because the foyer layout is reconfigured between events. The pre-function content is updated by the venue’s coordinator during the week, not by an outside vendor on every event.
The install window is the practical constraint. Most Woodbridge banquet halls book Fridays, Saturdays, and many Sundays for service through the spring and summer wedding season, and a busy hall often books a Sunday afternoon ceremony as well. The realistic install window for an existing room therefore runs Monday morning through Thursday afternoon, with a tighter Monday-to-Wednesday core during peak banquet months. The schedule is set in coordination with the venue’s coordinator and the catering team rather than improvised on the day.
Ceremony room front display
A single large commercial display or paired projection screen at the front of the ceremony room, fed by a back-of-room live camera so guests at the rear read the moment cleanly.
Reception hall video wall
A 2x2 or 3x3 LCD video wall along a feature wall, calibrated for uniform colour and brightness, with a small distribution layer for slideshow, live camera, and brand-supplied content sources.
Foyer schedule and table plan
Single or paired commercial display in the pre-function area showing the schedule and the table plan, updated by the venue’s coordinator during the week.
Monday-to-Thursday install window
Fridays, Saturdays, and most Sundays are service days through wedding season — the realistic install window runs Monday morning through Thursday afternoon, tightened mid-season.
What does a Vaughan Mills outlet tenant need from a commercial TV installer?
A Vaughan Mills tenant AV installer brief lives inside the Ivanhoé Cambridge tenant-design-criteria (TDC) package. The mall typically requires contractor pre-approval, a Certificate of Insurance naming Ivanhoé Cambridge and the property management company as additional insured, a freight-dock booking, and a defined install window outside trading hours. The procurement pattern is the same general shape as a Cadillac Fairview landlord-mall but uses Ivanhoé Cambridge’s specific tenant-coordination forms.
Vaughan Mills at 1 Bass Pro Mills Drive is one of Ontario’s largest outlet shopping centres, with roughly 200 retailers across a single-storey racetrack layout. The property is owned and operated by Ivanhoé Cambridge as part of the same outlet-mall portfolio that includes CrossIron Mills in Calgary. Tenant fit-out and storefront-display work runs under the property’s tenant-design-criteria envelope. Outlet tenants that need a strong in-store guest network for digital signage often layer Wi-Fi optimization in Vaughan on top of the storefront install.
A new TV or signage install inside a Vaughan Mills storefront starts with the tenant’s coordinator submitting the contractor to the property-management team for pre-approval, sharing the Certificate of Insurance with the landlord and the management company named as additional insured, and scheduling a freight-dock window for the install day. On the day, work runs through the mall’s designated tenant-improvement loading area, with the freight access booked for material handling. The installer signs in with mall security, follows the property’s noise and chemical rules, and works inside the leased premises during the agreed install window.
The documentation set at handover is the same three items as on any landlord-administered mall. A Certificate of Insurance specifically naming Ivanhoé Cambridge and the property-management company as additional insured. A sign-off form indicating the install complied with the tenant-design-criteria envelope. A clean tenant-side punch list — drywall touch-ups, cable-plate placement, fire-stopping where a penetration was made — so the lease-handback envelope stays intact.
For outlet-format tenants specifically, the in-store content brief tends to lean on a brand-mandated content feed pushed from the head office rather than a CMS chosen at the store level. The local install plan respects the brand pipeline and adds only the daypart schedule the store needs to run during outlet trading hours.
Contractor pre-approval
Submit the installer to Ivanhoé Cambridge’s property-management team in advance — tenant-design-criteria sign-off is required before any work is scheduled in the storefront.
COI naming the landlord
Provide a Certificate of Insurance with Ivanhoé Cambridge and the property-management company specifically named as additional insured — a standard tenant-design-criteria requirement on outlet-mall properties.
Freight dock and after-hours window
Book the freight dock and an agreed install window outside trading hours — typically before the mall’s morning open or after the evening close, depending on the work scope.
How do you install a commercial display in a Highway 400 distribution centre or healthcare-precinct office?
On the Highway 400 logistics belt between Highway 407 and Major Mackenzie, a distribution-centre front office or training room install scopes to a single commercial display in the reception lobby and a paired display or projection in the training and dispatch room — installed behind site-security gates with material handling through the building’s loading dock. Around the Cortellucci Vaughan Hospital precinct, the brief is meeting-room AV and classroom AV inside administrative and education spaces, not clinical AV.
The Highway 400 corridor through Vaughan between Highway 407 and Major Mackenzie concentrates a dense belt of Canadian distribution centres, last-mile logistics, food-and-beverage distributors, and warehousing. The front-office AV brief at most of these sites is small but specific. The reception lobby typically runs a single large-format commercial display showing the operator’s brand and the visitor sign-in flow. The training and dispatch room typically runs a paired display or a long-throw projector on a wall mount, fed by the operator’s training laptop and a fixed video bar for remote-trainer sessions. Larger meeting-room briefs often overlap with our conference room solutions scope.
The access pattern is the practical constraint. Each site is behind a security gate, with a check-in process for every contractor visit. Material handling for a 75 or 85 inch display goes through the building’s loading dock rather than the front lobby, and the building manager generally requires a copy of the install method statement before the install day. The install runs on a weekday during regular shift hours or on a weekday evening, with the building’s facilities lead present.
The healthcare-precinct brief around the Cortellucci Vaughan Hospital at Major Mackenzie Drive and Highway 400 sits in a different envelope. The hospital opened in 2021 as Mackenzie Health’s second acute-care campus, and the surrounding administrative and education buildings host meeting rooms, training rooms, and classroom AV. SetupTeam’s scope on this precinct is the administrative and education AV — meeting-room TVs, classroom projection or display, wayfinding signage in non-clinical hallways — not the clinical AV inside patient-care or procedural spaces, which requires hospital-side clinical-engineering and procurement processes that fall outside a commercial-TV installer’s remit.
In both venue types the documentation set at handover is the same three items: a Certificate of Insurance with the building owner and the property-management or facilities team named as additional insured, a sign-off form indicating the install complied with the building’s tenant-improvement rules, and a clean punch list.
Reception lobby display
Single large-format commercial display in the front lobby running the operator’s brand and the visitor sign-in flow — sized to the lobby sightline and fed by a small media player.
Training and dispatch room
Paired display or long-throw projector, a fixed video bar for remote-trainer sessions, and a ceiling microphone array — installed for a regular training schedule.
Healthcare-precinct admin AV
Meeting-room TVs, classroom AV, and non-clinical wayfinding signage in administrative and education buildings around the Cortellucci Vaughan Hospital — explicitly outside clinical AV scope.
How do you install commercial TVs in a Vaughan venue without disrupting trading hours or service?
By matching the install window to the venue’s actual operating pattern instead of running every job in the same Sunday-morning slot. A VMC boardroom installs after hours on a Saturday morning or weekday evening through the freight elevator. A Highway 7 or Concord showroom installs on a Sunday or in the early evening before close. A Woodbridge banquet hall installs Monday through Thursday between wedding-season bookings. A Vaughan Mills storefront installs before mall open or after mall close through the freight dock.
Vaughan has at least four distinct operating patterns that drive install scheduling. VMC corporate towers run a regular daytime business hour, with construction noise restricted to evenings or weekends and freight elevator booking required for any 75-inch-and-up display delivery — most VMC boardroom installs therefore run Saturday morning or a weekday evening with building-management approval. Highway 7 west and Concord showrooms run a six-day retail week (Monday through Saturday), so a Sunday install is the most disruption-free slot, with an evening install before close as the secondary option. A restaurant TV installer Vaughan brief on a Highway 7 sit-down restaurant follows a similar pattern but ramps a couple of hours later because dinner service runs into the evening.
Woodbridge banquet halls book Fridays, Saturdays, and many Sundays for service, so the realistic install window for an existing room runs Monday morning through Thursday afternoon. During peak banquet months (May through October) the core window tightens to Monday through Wednesday because Thursday is often used for venue set-up for a Friday event. Vaughan Mills outlet stores follow the mall’s freight-dock and after-hours rules, with installs running either before the mall’s morning open or after the evening close depending on the scope of work.
Highway 400 distribution-centre offices install on a weekday during regular shift hours or on a weekday evening with the building’s facilities lead present, behind site security gates with check-in for every contractor. The Cortellucci Vaughan Hospital admin and education spaces install during regular building hours under the facilities team’s coordination.
The install plan documents the window the venue actually has, the access route (storefront, loading dock, freight elevator, suite door, security gate), the contact who unlocks the space, and the sign-off who closes it down. The plan does not assume a one-size install slot. We confirm the schedule and the documentation before the Certificate of Insurance and the install method statement go out. Where a venue also needs the supporting display-mount and bracket scope, the same crew handles tv wall mounting in Vaughan as part of the same visit.
- Confirm the venue pattern: VMC Saturday morning or weekday evening, showroom Sunday or evening, Woodbridge banquet Monday-to-Thursday, Vaughan Mills before-open or after-close
- Confirm the access route: freight elevator, loading dock, security gate, storefront roller door, or floor-suite
- Confirm the documentation: Certificate of Insurance with the right additional-insured names, contractor pre-approval where applicable, WSIB clearance, install method statement
- Confirm the sign-off: who walks the install at the end of the shift, who signs the punch list, who locks the venue or closes the gate
- Send the COI and install method statement before the truck rolls, not on the day
What CMS and distribution architecture fits a Vaughan digital signage or multi-display install?
A digital signage installation Vaughan project usually lands on one of three CMS choices — BrightSign, Samsung MagicInfo, or a SaaS platform such as Yodeck, ScreenCloud, or OptiSigns — paired with HDBaseT or IP-over-AV distribution where more than three displays share a source. The right choice is driven by the operator’s content workflow and the brand pipeline, not by the screen brand or the venue category.
Most Vaughan operators land in one of three CMS lanes. A Highway 7 showroom or a Vaughan Mills outlet storefront typically runs a brand-mandated CMS pushed from the parent brand’s content pipeline (cabinetry, stone, furniture, fashion outlet) — the local install plan respects the brand pipeline rather than imposing a separate third-party CMS. A Woodbridge banquet venue, a Highway 7 sit-down restaurant, or a Highway 400 distribution-centre lobby typically runs a SaaS platform such as Yodeck, ScreenCloud, or OptiSigns — low monthly cost, drag-and-drop scheduling, and a media player that fits behind a single display. A QSR or menu-board operator usually standardises on BrightSign players, with the menu board installer Toronto brief shaped around a standard BrightSign reference layout. A Samsung-only environment can run Samsung MagicInfo directly out of the display without a separate player.
For multi-display installs where more than three screens share a source — a VMC training room with a back-of-house repeater display, a Woodbridge reception hall with paired ballrooms, a Highway 7 showroom flagship with a coordinated feature wall and product loop — HDBaseT distribution is the common choice. Crestron NVX or Wyrestorm IP-over-AV is selected where the venue already runs structured cabling and prefers an IP-routed pattern, which is most common on new VMC floors. The pattern carries the same source-and-sink discipline as a residential home theatre installation at scale.
Video walls are a separate decision. A bezel-to-bezel 2x2 or 3x3 LCD video wall is the common Woodbridge banquet brief and the common Highway 7 showroom flagship brief — Samsung VHR or LG UH5F panels on a pop-out wall-mount system, calibrated for uniform colour and brightness, with the video wall processor matched to the source mix. A video wall installer Vaughan project on a VMC lobby usually steps up to direct-view LED (1.5 mm to 2.5 mm pixel pitch) because the read-at-distance from the building entrance demands it, and a single-screen LCD wall would not carry the lobby’s scale.
Brand-pipeline CMS
Most Highway 7 showroom and Vaughan Mills outlet storefront content is pushed from the parent brand’s content pipeline — the install respects the pipeline rather than imposing a third-party CMS.
SaaS CMS for single-display ops
Yodeck, ScreenCloud, or OptiSigns paired with a compact media player — drag-and-drop scheduling for a banquet foyer, a restaurant menu screen, or a distribution-centre lobby.
BrightSign and MagicInfo
BrightSign for QSR and 24/7 menu boards; Samsung MagicInfo direct out of the display for Samsung-only environments — the menu-board installer brief follows the franchisee’s brand standard.
HDBaseT, NVX, and video walls
HDBaseT for shared-source multi-display, Crestron NVX or Wyrestorm for IP-over-AV on new VMC floors, LCD video walls for Woodbridge ballrooms and showroom flagships, direct-view LED for VMC lobby scale.
How much does commercial TV installation cost for a Vaughan business?
Pricing tracks the venue and the scope rather than the postal code. A single commercial display in a VMC boardroom or a Highway 7 showroom feature wall sits in one band. A Vaughan Mills outlet storefront tenant install or a Highway 400 distribution-centre lobby display sits in a similar band. A Woodbridge banquet reception hall with a video wall and paired ballrooms is a larger project. A multi-room flagship showroom or a multi-tower VMC tenant fit-out is a project, not a one-day install.
Most Vaughan commercial-TV pricing falls into three tiers. A single commercial display install — VMC boardroom, Highway 7 showroom feature wall, Highway 400 lobby, Vaughan Mills outlet storefront — generally runs as a one-day install with the display, the commercial mount, the cable path, the small media player, and the CMS onboarding inside scope. A multi-display install at a Woodbridge banquet venue or a Highway 7 showroom flagship runs as a one-to-two-day install with the larger video wall or paired LCD wall, the distribution layer (HDBaseT or NVX), the video-wall processor, and the calibration pass inside scope. A multi-room or multi-tower project — a full VMC tenant fit-out, a flagship banquet venue with three ballrooms and a foyer, or a multi-site outlet refresh — runs as a phased project with a documented design, a survey, and a defined commissioning schedule.
What sits inside the install fee on every Vaughan commercial-TV project is the same. A free on-site walkthrough, a written line-item quote tied to the scope, the Certificate of Insurance with the right additional-insured names ahead of time, the WSIB clearance, the install method statement, freight or after-hours scheduling coordinated with the building, and a clean handover package with the cable map and the CMS log-in. Browse see recent installation work for representative project sets. What sits outside is anything that belongs to the building or the brand — base-building electrical pathways, brand-side content production, hospital-side clinical AV, or any work the property manager classifies as base-building scope.
Single-display install
VMC boardroom, Highway 7 showroom feature wall, Vaughan Mills outlet storefront, Highway 400 lobby — display, commercial mount, cable path, media player, CMS onboarding inside scope.
Multi-display install
Woodbridge banquet reception hall video wall, Highway 7 showroom flagship — paired LCD or video wall, HDBaseT or NVX distribution, processor, calibration pass inside scope.
Written line-item quote after a site visit
Free on-site walkthrough, written quote tied to scope, COI, WSIB clearance, and install method statement documented in the same package so the building or property manager and the operator see the same paperwork.
What do Vaughan commercial TV installs actually look like across the city?
Vaughan commercial TV work tends to land in four shapes. A typical Vaughan Metropolitan Centre brief is a dual-display boardroom on a new Class A floor with a certified Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms bar. A typical Highway 7 or Concord showroom brief is a feature-wall display at the entrance, a back-of-room product-loop display, and a video wall in the flagship rooms. A typical Woodbridge banquet brief is a ceremony-space display, a reception-hall video wall, and a foyer schedule screen. A typical Vaughan Mills brief is a single tenant-storefront display installed under Ivanhoé Cambridge’s tenant-design-criteria envelope.
A typical installation inside a Vaughan Metropolitan Centre tower involves a dual-display front wall in a Class A boardroom, a certified Microsoft Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms bar, a ceiling microphone array, and a tabletop scheduler — installed Saturday morning or a weekday evening through the freight elevator, with the install plan riding the developer’s base-building cable pathways.
A typical installation along the Highway 7 west and Concord showroom corridor involves a large-format commercial display flush-mounted into a feature wall at the showroom entrance, a paired product-loop display behind the consultation desk, and an LCD video wall in the larger flagship rooms. The display runs the brand’s content pipeline through trading hours and ramps down overnight, and the install is scheduled on a Sunday or in the early evening before close to avoid disrupting Saturday showroom traffic.
A typical installation in a Woodbridge banquet venue along Highway 7 west involves a single large display or paired projection at the front of the ceremony room, a 2x2 or 3x3 LCD video wall along the reception hall feature wall, and one or two foyer displays for the schedule and the table plan. The install runs Monday through Thursday between the venue’s Friday-to-Sunday service days, coordinated with the venue’s coordinator and the catering team.
A typical installation at a Vaughan Mills outlet storefront involves a single commercial display mounted into the storefront fixture or on a back wall, with the Certificate of Insurance naming Ivanhoé Cambridge and the property-management company as additional insured ahead of the day, the freight-dock window booked, and the install completed before the mall’s morning open or after the evening close. Read see SetupTeam customer reviews for operator-side context.
Planning a Vaughan commercial-AV project?
VMC boardroom, Highway 7 showroom, Woodbridge banquet hall, Vaughan Mills storefront, or Highway 400 distribution office — tell us the venue and the scope. We’ll respond with a clear estimate.
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Scope a Vaughan commercial TV or digital signage project
Book a free site visit. We walk the VMC boardroom floor, the Highway 7 or Concord showroom, the Woodbridge banquet venue, the Vaughan Mills tenant unit, or the Highway 400 distribution-centre office, confirm the procurement path with the building or property manager, and send a written line-item quote with the COI and after-hours documentation in the same package.