Three active licenses. Held by the company. Never borrowed.
ANI Networks holds CSLB licenses B (General Building Contractor), C-10 (Electrical — which, per CSLB, covers the low-voltage scope normally assigned to C-7), and C-20 (Warm-Air Heating, Ventilating & Air-Conditioning) — all in the company's name. We pull every permit, carry every insurance, and pass every inspection. You'll never hear "let me check with my electrician" on an ANI job, because the electrician works here.
Verify us
Every CSLB license in California is publicly searchable. Look us up on the official CSLB registry before signing anything — we recommend it.
Search the CSLB registry →General Building Contractor
The license that lets us prime and sign a whole-building scope — not just a trade slice. With a B we can permit, coordinate, and close out multi-trade projects end-to-end, with our own C-10 and C-20 specialty crafts inside the same accountable stack.
- Prime contractor on multi-trade commercial and mixed-use builds
- In-house coordination of framing, MEP, finishes, and low-voltage
- One signature on the permit, one throat to choke on the punch list
Electrical (covers low-voltage scope)
Full electrical scope — line-voltage distribution, branch circuits, service entrance, EV charging — plus every low-voltage system a C-7 would cover. Per CSLB, a C-10 contractor can install electrical work of any voltage level, including the cabling, CCTV, access control, and network infrastructure that make a building intelligent.
- Line-voltage panels, branch circuits, and EV charging (Level 2 / DCFC-coordinated)
- Low-voltage scope: structured cabling, IP video, access control, AV, network
- Title 24 + NEC-compliant design, grounding, and utility coordination
HVAC (Warm-Air, Ventilating & Air-Conditioning)
Warm-air heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning — complete with ducts, registers, thermostatic controls, and the sensor networks intelligent buildings actually need. Essential for healthcare, data center, mixed-use, and any environment where comfort and uptime aren't optional.
- AC units, rooftop packages, and VRF system install + service
- Duct, register, plenum, and ventilation design
- Smart thermostatic controls wired to the Cortex observability stack
Three licenses or three separate headaches.
Most contractors hold one CSLB classification and sub-contract the rest. That sounds fine until something in the overlap zone breaks — and infrastructure is nothing but overlap zones.
- CSLB BGeneral Building Contractor
- CSLB C-10Electrical (covers low-voltage)
- CSLB C-20HVAC (Warm-Air Heating, Ventilating & A/C)
One contract
One contract, not three.
Your MSA and SOW cover the whole stack. No separate subs with separate terms, payment schedules, insurance carriers, or deadlines to chase.
One liability
One liability line.
If something installed under any of our licenses fails, the claim is against us. We don't forward you to "our electrical sub's insurance carrier" six weeks after the incident.
No gaps
No licensing gap.
The space between low-voltage data cabling and line-voltage branch circuits is where single-license contractors routinely break code. A C-10 contractor can legally cover both — and with a B on top we also sign off on the multi-trade coordination. No ambiguity.
Coverage levels you can put in a procurement file.
Certificates of insurance available on request. We maintain General Liability, Commercial Auto, and Workers' Compensation coverage well above what a typical low-voltage contractor carries — because we're often the largest subcontractor on a site and the liability math reflects that.
Let's build infrastructure that thinks.
Bring us a site walk, a floor plan, or a problem you're tired of re-explaining to three different vendors. We'll return a scoped, quoted, AI-native plan — usually within a week.