The Myth of Low Cost: Why Legacy Decisions Cost More Than You Think
In the planning and design of technology systems for the built environment, one assumption continues to dominate decision-making:
Lower initial cost equals better value
It is an understandable instinct. Capital budgets are constrained. Procurement processes reward competitive bids. And legacy technologies—whether cabling, AV systems, or communications infrastructure—often present the most attractive upfront pricing. But this assumption is fundamentally flawed.
When evaluated over the lifecycle of a building—10, 15, or 20 years—legacy technology decisions rarely produce savings. Instead, they create a pattern of deferred cost, operational inefficiency, and degraded user experience that compounds over time. The result is what can be described as the hidden cost of legacy.
The Illusion of CapEx Savings
Legacy systems win early because they minimize capital expenditure (CapEx). Whether it is lower-grade cabling, projector-based display systems, analog switching, or traditional telephony, the first cost is often meaningfully lower. However, as demonstrated in recent research on Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) in the built environment, initial cost represents only a fraction of the financial picture. Over time, operational expenses (OpEx) dominate:
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Maintenance Labor
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Energy Consumption
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System Downtime
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Replacement Cycles
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Space And Infrastructure Overhead
In many cases, more than 70% of total system cost occurs after installation. This reframes the decision entirely. The question is no longer: What does it cost to install? It becomes: What does it cost to live with?
The Compounding Effect of Legacy
Legacy technologies introduce costs that do not appear on day one but accumulate over time.
1. Maintenance and Service Burden
Older systems often require:
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Frequent On-Site Service Calls
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Manual Calibration And Adjustment
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Replacement Of Consumable Components
Each intervention carries labor costs, scheduling disruption, and lost productivity.
2. Energy Inefficiency
Legacy systems are typically less energy-efficient than modern alternatives:
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Lamp-Based Projectors Consume More Power
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Distributed Hardware Requires Cooling
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Inefficient Cabling Increases Power Loss
These costs persist every day over the life of the system.
3. Forced Replacement Cycles
Perhaps the most significant hidden cost is premature obsolescence. Systems that cannot support:
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Higher Bandwidth
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New Endpoints
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Modern Protocols
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Hybrid Collaboration
Considering what must be replaced long before the building itself reaches end-of-life, leads to the most expensive scenario in technology planning:
Rip-and-replace during active operations
4. Space and Infrastructure Overhead
Legacy architectures often require:
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Dedicated Equipment Rooms
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Cooling Infrastructure
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Excess Cabling Pathways
These consume valuable real estate and increase both construction and operational costs.
The Experience Cost of Ownership (XCO)
While financial metrics tell part of the story, they miss a critical dimension:
The cost of user experience
Technology systems are not neutral. They either enable or inhibit human performance. Legacy systems often introduce friction that manifests as:
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Delayed Meeting Start Times
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Unreliable Hybrid Communication
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Poor Audio Intelligibility
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Inconsistent Display Quality
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Limited Flexibility In Use
Over time, users adapt—not by embracing the system, but by working around it. They:
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Bring Personal Devices To Replace Installed Systems
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Avoid Using Installed AV Altogether
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Simplify Collaboration To Fit Technology Limitations
This behavior represents a hidden but significant cost:
Lost productivity, reduced engagement, and diminished outcomes
We can define this as:
Experience Cost of Ownership (XCO)
Unlike TCO, which measures dollars, XCO measures impact on human performance. And in most environments—education, healthcare, enterprise—the cost of poor experience far exceeds the cost of technology itself.
Legacy vs. Future-Ready: A Different Framework
When evaluated through both TCO and XCO, the comparison between legacy and modern systems changes. Legacy systems offer:
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Lower Initial Cost
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Familiar Technology
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Limited Immediate Risk
But they also introduce:
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Higher Long-Term Cost
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Reduced Flexibility
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Degraded User Experience
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Accelerated Obsolescence
Future-ready systems—while often requiring higher upfront investment—deliver:
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Lower Lifecycle Cost
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Scalable Infrastructure
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Reduced Maintenance
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Improved Energy Efficiency
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Superior User Experience
Most importantly, they align with how environments are actually used today: dynamically, collaboratively, and increasingly digitally.
The Strategic Cost of Standing Still
Perhaps the most overlooked impact of legacy decisions is their strategic impact. Technology systems are no longer isolated utilities. They are platforms that support:
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Learning Environments
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Clinical Training
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Hybrid Work
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Simulation And Visualization
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Data-Driven Decision Making
Choosing legacy systems limits an organization’s ability to evolve in these areas. It introduces:
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Incompatibility With New Technologies
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Increased Cost Of Future Upgrades
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Reduced Organizational Agility
In effect, legacy decisions do not just cost more over time—they constrain what is possible.
A New Way to Evaluate Value
To make better technology decisions, organizations must expand how they define value. Instead of focusing solely on CapEx, the evaluation should include:
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Total Cost Of Ownership (TCO) Over 10–20 Years
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Experience Cost Of Ownership (XCO)
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Flexibility And Scalability
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Alignment With Future Technology Trends
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Operational Efficiency And Sustainability
This broader framework reveals a simple truth:
The lowest-cost system at installation is rarely the lowest-cost system over time.
Implications of AI Integration
As the industry moves toward AI-enabled environments, the cost of legacy decisions becomes even more pronounced. AI-driven systems depend on:
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Networked, High-Bandwidth Infrastructure
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Clean, Structured Data Streams
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Real-Time Media Processing
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Scalable Cloud Integration
Legacy systems typically lack these characteristics. They:
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Do Not Generate Usable Data
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Cannot Support Real-Time Analytics
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Limit Integration With Cloud Services
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Constrain Automation and Orchestration
This creates a critical divide:
- Future-ready environments become AI-capable platforms
- Legacy environments remain isolated, static systems
The implication is clear:
Choosing legacy today is not just a cost decision
It is a decision about whether AI-enabled experiences will be possible tomorrow
Looking Ahead
This article establishes a foundational principle:
Technology decisions must be evaluated over time, not at installation
In Part 2, we will examine one of the most consequential of these decisions—the infrastructure hidden behind walls—and how choices in cabling and network architecture lock in cost, performance, and future capability for decades. The hidden cost of legacy is not theoretical. It is already embedded in the environments we design. The question is whether we continue to repeat it.
For more thoughts on this, contact me at craigpark.com.
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