Technically you are not talking about a consolidation point. A consolidation point is when you make a patch point if you will between permanent horizontal cabling and the flexible work area cables. Picture this as another patchrack installed out near a dense cubical section of work stations, each work station patch cable would route back to the patchrack. It is designed to facilitate easy moves and changes for dense office areas by just rerouting patch cords and not moving permanent wiring.
What you are describing is actually a splice. I would not recommend it, but it may be the only practical solution. If you choose to take that approach, I would use the best quality IDC type conectors (110 or 210 blocks) that are Cat5 rated. No matter how you build it, you should not exceed the 90 meter rule from the Work Outlet to the Horizontal Crossconnect. The next consideration the allowed 10 meters total patchcable length from the work outlet to the computer, and from the patchrack to the active equipment (switch/hub).
SO, what happens if you exceed the limit? It depends on what speed you run on the network, the quality of the electronics, the quality of the wire and hardware, the quality of the terminations, etc. I have seen installed Cat5 run fine at 100 Mbs on installs over 360 feet. The problem for the customer is...if they do upgrade to faster network speeds, will this support it? And when (not if) they do experience network problems, is the over length cable going to be the first suspect?
Good luck, hope that helps. It is only my opinion, based on my experience and education...I am always willing to learn, educate me!
Daron J. Wilson, RCDD
daron.wilson@lhmorris.com