
Columbus has quietly become a data center town. The build-out west toward New Albany and out along the corridors has pulled serious network infrastructure into central Ohio, and the businesses here, from insurance giants downtown to a fast-growing tech scene in the Short North, increasingly run everything in the cloud. Run that on a shared connection in a busy building and your throughput sags right when you need it. A dedicated circuit gives you private, symmetrical bandwidth and an SLA that puts dollars behind the uptime number.
BlueHouse Telecom is carrier neutral, so we do not push one network. A logistics operation out by Rickenbacker, a research group near Ohio State, an insurance back office in the Arena District, each sits on different infrastructure, and we pull live pricing and build timelines from every provider that reaches the address. We lay the options out plainly so the circuit you sign for matches the work in front of you.
Who relies on a private circuit here
Columbus carries a heavy concentration of insurance, finance, and retail headquarters, and those operations live inside cloud platforms, claims systems, and video that runs all day. A finance team in a downtown tower near the Scioto Mile reconciling on a shared pipe at quarter end feels every other tenant pulling on the same line. A dedicated circuit takes that contention off the table because nobody else is on it.
The logistics belt around Rickenbacker and the warehouse corridors moves data as hard as it moves freight, with warehouse management systems and customer portals that cannot stall. Symmetrical bandwidth keeps those systems responsive whether it is the morning rush or the overnight shift.
Downtown towers and the growth corridors
The mix here runs from established towers around Capitol Square to newer development in the Short North and the Arena District, and the circuit picture changes with it. A modern building near High Street may have several providers competing, while an older property can still terminate copper on certain floors and need a building entrance agreement before fiber is pulled. We handle that paperwork and coordinate with property management so the install does not stall.
Out in the suburbs toward Dublin, Westerville, and New Albany, serviceability genuinely changes address to address as the fiber follows new construction. We verify availability at your exact suite first and tell you plainly whether it is a quick lit turn-up or a fresh lateral.
From serviceability check to live cutover
We check your precise suite first, because availability in these buildings can change one floor to the next. Then we compare the qualified providers on price, contract term, install window, and the teeth in their SLA, and you see the full slate rather than a single quote.
Once you choose, we run the order, the survey, and the cutover, and we stay assigned to your account afterward. When something needs attention, there is one person to call who already knows your setup.
What you get with Dedicated Internet
Our claims platform lives entirely in the cloud, and the shared line in our downtown building crawled every afternoon. BlueHouse priced three carriers for our exact floor, dealt with the building entrance agreement, and put in a symmetrical circuit with a real SLA. The slowdowns are gone and we finally have an uptime number we can hold someone to.
Why Columbus businesses choose BlueHouse
Keep cloud apps and video steady through the busiest hours
Enforce a real uptime guarantee instead of a best effort line
Add bandwidth without ripping out and replacing the circuit
End the vendor blame game with one team across all carriers
