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Sockets and electrical columns: optimising distribution and scalability — KYTOM
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Sockets and electrical columns: optimising distribution and scalability

Three technical trade-offs: ratio, placement, unit power

20% scalability reserve, not 50%: electrical oversizing inflates the budget with no demonstrable operational benefit over the medium term. The conventional wisdom of « planning big » drives budgets up on the power systems package, with no measurable gain in operation. Tertiary electrical distribution involves trade-offs across three variables: socket-to-workstation ratio (1.2 to 1.8 depending on the job profile), column placement (central or peripheral) and reserve sizing. On a 600 m² floor accommodating 70 workstations, 40 to 60 16A sockets per floor cover everyday uses, supplemented by an equal number of backed-up sockets. Kytom has coordinated these trade-offs since 2006, across 1200+ delivered tertiary projects.

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Electrical sizing pits three logics against one another: theoretical density, real-world use, scalability. Each variable can be quantified.

  • Socket-to-workstation ratio: the NF C 15-100 standard requires 1 socket per workstation; depending on the job profile, the real need ranges from 1.2 to 1.8 sockets per workstation (fixed, hybrid and mobile profiles).
  • Placement: central columns (savings on cabling runs) or peripheral columns (reconfiguration possible within 48h with no trenching).
  • Unit power: 16A circuits for the vast majority of office uses, 20A circuits for graphics workstations and 4K screens.
Workstation profile Socket-to-workstation ratio Predominant rating
Fixed administrative desk 1.2 to 1.4 16A
Hybrid (flex office) 1.4 to 1.6 16A + USB
Technical workstation (CAD, finance) 1.6 to 1.8 20A

These ranges are drawn from our field experience on recent tertiary projects.

Our reading diverges from common practice on column placement. Industry conventional wisdom systematically favours central columns to save on cabling runs. In practice, on flex office floors reconfigured every 24 to 36 months, the initial extra cost of peripheral columns pays for itself from the very first reconfiguration: no trenching in the slab, no operational shutdown. The calculation is not made on the initial CAPEX but over the occupancy life cycle.

Initial undersizing generates rework whose cost can reach several times that of controlled oversizing: the trade-off is made over the life cycle, not on the initial CAPEX.

When this trade-off does not apply. On a floor of less than 200 m² with fewer than 20 homogeneous fixed workstations, profile-based modelling becomes oversized: a standard NF C 15-100 sizing without a usage audit is sufficient. Likewise, for a site occupied less than 5 years before a planned move, the 20% scalability reserve is not justified, as its ROI exceeds the duration of occupancy. In that case, prefer strict sizing with mobile power distribution units.

Sockets and electrical columns: optimising distribution and scalability
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For the CFO and Asset Manager: four mistakes costing 15 to 30% of the electrical budget

Read in terms of cash flow and asset value, the power systems package represents a significant share of the initial CAPEX, but sizing errors generate costly rework over five years.

  1. Sizing based on theoretical occupancy: ignoring mobile profiles leads to oversizing flex zones, while fixed workstations lack backed-up sockets. CFO impact: operational OPEX inflated by power strips and extension leads, outside the ten-year guarantee.
  2. Deferred coordination with the VDI and HVAC packages: the column routing determines the path for low-voltage cabling and supply ducting; late rework generates a significant extra cost per m², depending on the scale of corrective works required. Asset Manager impact: delayed entry into rental operation, lost rent quantifiable at 25 to 45 EUR/m²/month.
  3. Fire safety overlooked: open-space columns become evacuation obstacles if they do not comply with the Labour Code rules (articles R4227-1 et seq.). Legal impact: criminal liability of the head of establishment engaged.
  4. Specialised equipment underestimated: multifunction printers, videoconferencing units and interactive screens are frequently underestimated at the design stage and account for a disproportionate share of the malfunctions reported in operation.

The remedy comes in three steps: map the job profiles, validate the technical interfaces in a multi-package review, and provide a power reserve of 25 to 35% consistent with the subscribed capacity (50 to 100 kVA for 500 to 1,000 m²).

Limit of this framework. These four mistakes concern projects over 400 m² with multi-package coordination. On premises of less than 300 m² with a single use (practice, sales agency), interface complexity does not justify a formal multi-package review; a single-line diagram validated by the electrician with the interior architect is sufficient. The full method becomes administrative overhead below this threshold.

Sockets and electrical columns: optimising distribution and scalability
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4-step audit method: from usage profile to scalable sizing

The Kytom 4-step method structures electrical sizing in an auditable way.

  • Step 1, usage audit: job interviews, count of current equipment, 3-year projection. This phase significantly reduces sizing errors by objectifying real needs before any design work.
  • Step 2, flow modelling: mapping user journeys, validating the rule of a maximum of 3 metres between workstation and socket.
  • Step 3, multi-package coordination: joint review with the VDI, HVAC and fire safety trades. Multi-package synchronisation significantly reduces on-site rework, a structural advantage of the design and build approach.
  • Step 4, scalable sizing: integration of 20% scalability capacity on subscribed power and number of circuits, no more.

In a design and build approach, this upfront coordination noticeably shortens the overall delivery time on a standard tertiary floor. The standards involved (NF C 15-100 for low-voltage installations, NF C 13-100 for delivery substations) frame the technical choices, while the usage audit frames the economic choices. Both dimensions are validated in the design review, never during execution.

Conditions under which the 4-step method does not apply. For a simple addition of circuits to an existing installation (extension of fewer than 10 sockets, no modification of the main switchboard), the full method is disproportionate: an on-site survey and a direct connection diagram by the incumbent electrician are sufficient. The 4-step method is justified from a floor redeployment, a major change in usage profile, or an increase in subscribed power greater than 20%.

Sockets and electrical columns: optimising distribution and scalability
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Economic ratios for the CAPEX trade-off

Three ratios frame the investment decision on the power systems package. The initial CAPEX is generally between 12 and 18 EUR/m² for a standard tertiary floor (50 to 80 workstations for 500 to 800 m²), and between 18 and 25 EUR/m² for a floor with high technical density (CAD, trading, 24/7 floors). In the event of initial undersizing, the cost of post-delivery rework can represent a significant fraction of the original CAPEX over five years, a strong argument for anticipating scalability from the design stage.

05 — Inspirations

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