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His advice to any young Saudi thinking about this path: "Don't just learn to connect wires. Learn to connect systems. The buildings of the future won't have keys or light switches. They will have readers, sensors, and data. And someone has to make them work. That someone is an ELV technician."
His older brother, a civil engineer on the NEOM project, gave him the answer over a cup of qahwa . "Forget general degrees," his brother said. "Get specialized. Everything now is smart: buildings, traffic, security. They all run on ELV. Get that certification, and you'll have a career."
The senior judge looked at Yousef's clean cable management (velcro ties, not zip ties) and his labeled wires. "When can you start?"
Yousef, a 22-year-old from Riyadh, had a problem. He had finished high school with good grades in science, but the traditional university paths felt abstract and uninspiring. He wanted to work with his hands, understand smart systems, and be part of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 transformation. He just didn't know how.
ELV. Extra Low Voltage. It was a world Yousef had seen but never named: the CCTV cameras in the metro, the fiber-optic cables in his apartment block, the access card beeping at his father’s office, the fire alarm system in the mall. These systems ran on less than 50 volts—safe from electrocution but complex in design.
In the final month, the course prepared them for industry certifications (like BICSI Installer or manufacturer-specific ones from Hikvision, Honeywell, or Siemens). But more surprisingly, they learned communication . "You will work alongside electricians, plasterers, and project managers," Umar warned. "If an electrician runs a 220V power cable through your ELV tray, the interference will destroy your signal. You must explain why without starting a fight. And you will write daily reports. Bad English or bad Arabic means no payment."
The institute had a "mock site"—a fake office room with a glass door, a motorized gate, a smoke generator, and four CCTV cameras. Here, students worked in teams. One day, Yousef was the lead tech: install a proximity card reader, wire the magnetic lock, program the controller to only open for specific cards, and set a camera to record that door. When the door clicked open for his test card, the instructor nodded. "Good. Now, do it under time pressure – you have 45 minutes. Real sites don't wait."
The next morning, Yousef searched "ELV technician course Saudi Arabia." He found several options: three-month diplomas at private technical institutes in Jeddah and Dammam, a six-month evening program at a vocational college in Riyadh, and even an online theory course with a practical week in a lab.