March 3, 2025
Some day, you may be in an organization that's about to add some more fiber cabling between two rooms in the same building, or maybe two close by buildings, and someone may ask you for your opinion about many fiber pairs should be run. My personal advice is simple: run more fiber than you think you need, ideally a bunch more (this generalizes to network cabling in general, but copper cabling is a lot more bulky and so harder to run (much) more of). There is an unreasonable amount of fiber to run, but mostly it comes up when you'd have to put in giant fiber patch panels.
The obvious reason to run more fiber is that you may well expand your need for fiber in the future. Someone will want to run a dedicated, private network connection between two locations; someone will want to trunk things to get more bandwidth; someone will want to run a weird protocol that requires its own network segment (did you know you can run HDMI over Ethernet?); and so on. It's relatively inexpensive to add some more fiber pairs when you're already running fiber but much more expensive to have to run additional fiber later, so you might as well give yourself room for growth.
The less obvious reason to run extra fiber is that every so often fiber pairs stop working, just like network cables go bad, and when this happens you'll need to replace them with spare fiber pairs, which means you need those spare fiber pairs. Some of the time this fiber failure is (probably) because a raccoon got into your machine room, but some of the time it just happens for reasons that no one is likely to ever explain to you. And when this happens, you don't necessarily lose only a single pair. Today, for example, we lost three fiber pairs that ran between two adjacent buildings and evidence suggests that other people at the university lost at least one more pair.
(There are a variety of possible causes for sudden loss of multiple pairs, probably all running through a common path, which I will leave to your imagination. These fiber runs are probably not important enough to cause anyone to do a detailed investigation of where the fault is and what happened.)
Fiber comes in two varieties, single mode and multi-mode. I don't know enough to know if you should make a point of running both (over distances where either can be used) as part of the whole 'run more fiber' thing. Locally we have both SM and MM fiber and have switched back and forth between them at times (and may have to do so as a result of the current failures).
PS: Possibly you work in an organization where broken inside-building fiber runs are regularly fixed or replaced. That is not our local experience; someone has to pay for fixing or replacing, and when you have spare fiber pairs left it's easier to switch over to them rather than try to come up with the money and so on.
(Repairing or replacing broken fiber pairs will reduce your long term need for additional fiber, but obviously not the short term need. If you lose N pairs of fiber, you need N spare pairs to get back into operation.)