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    Bournemouth uses waste pipes for new comms infrastructure

The council is turning an otherwise dirty business into one that will bear fruits for council staff and tax payers alike by working with H2O Networks to use existing sewerage pipes for connectivity.

By Maggie Holland, 5 Mar 2007 at 16:27

Bournemouth has taken a novel approach to implementing a new communications infrastructure by making use of pipes usually used for expelling sewerage to deliver broadband connectivity.

By using the existing infrastructure, the council has been able to speed up installation by about 80 per cent as well as spending tax payers' money on enhancing local services rather than digging up roads to support the new network.

The normal infrastructural upheavals caused by network requirements are both disruptive and environmentally damaging, yet they occur more than four million times each year at an estimated cost of £1 billion.

To eliminate this damage and expense, Bournemouth Borough Council decided to implement H2O Networks' fibre optical cable underground sewer (FOCUS) system to make use of Wessex Water Enterprises' sewerage assets.

"In partnership with H2O Networks we are making a tremendous cost saving, meaning that we can put Council Tax payers' money to better use," said Bob Rhodes, the council's IT manager.

"Using the sewer network is also a more environmentally friendly way to lay the fibre optic cable, and it makes sense to utilise the existing sewer network that's right under our noses. Our network was operational in just over a week with no need for us to undergo the complex negotiations that come with getting the permission to dig up roads and pavements."

Elfed Thomas, managing director at H2O Networks added: "Our FOCUS system gives organisations a cost-effective alternative to the traditional method of deploying fibre cable.

"It offers a fixed term cost rather than bandwidth tariffs, so that when extra capacity is needed, it's there, and the business doesn't incur further charges."

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