Even in today’s world, many areas within our country have low-speed connectivity—or none. In many rural areas, including Tribal Nations, there is a push to provide Internet for All. In November 2021, President Biden signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act into law and provided $billions for broadband access. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL.org), “The initiative will invest billion to provide affordable, reliable, high-speed internet for all Americans by the end of the decade and will be administered and implemented by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration via three programs and their corresponding Notices of Funding Opportunity: Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (.5 billion); Enabling Middle Mile Broadband Infrastructure Program (

February 12, 2024

Keeping Our World Connected with Broadband

by Colliers Engineering & Design

billion); and State Digital Equity Act programs (

February 12, 2024

Keeping Our World Connected with Broadband

by Colliers Engineering & Design

.5 billion).

According to the Harvard Business Review, “Right now, close to half of the U.S. population is not using the internet at broadband speeds, either because broadband internet infrastructure does not reach them, they can’t afford the service, or they don’t have the skills or knowledge to use it.”

What we do

Broadband is the backbone of internet architecture. While our Telecommunications group is vested in working on helping carriers with tower construction, structural modifications for growing and upgrading networks, our broadband division works on designing the fiber connectivity from a central office to the carrier tower (FTTT). An unlimited amount of data can be transferred depending on the extent of electronics built into the central office. At this stage, fiber optic cables can be implemented via aerial design (on poles) or underground using the trench or bore method.

This middle-mile feeds broadband to the customer, which can be enterprise (business) clients or our homes (FTTH), as consumers, or other entities (FTTX), and is called OSP, or Outside Plant design.  Optical Fiber, known as the backhaul, provides connectivity of internet service providers tying cities and states together. It also ties back into the main Google hub and is configured to connect to the cell antennas which feed cellphones.

ISP, or Inside Plant installation, is the phase when the fiber network reaches its final destination—the electronic panel or cabinet in the building. For larger, more commercial clients, this cabinet typically houses racks that include the facility’s network connection, transmission electronics, DC power, generator and back-up batteries. For the home, you pretty much just turn on your computers, TVs, and myriad other electronic devices, to bring the IoT (Internet of Things) to life while we enjoy the fastest speeds available.

Conclusion

Our fiber team collaborates with clients to develop turnkey broadband design solutions for all segments of their projects to meet the ever-growing demand for network capacity. This includes accurate permitting and some grant potential in certain areas, leading to rapid deployment of fiber installations. Being a multi-disciplinary engineering firm with a national presence enables us to deliver an efficient experience for our customers