Geo to connect the Corridor to next generation fibre broadband
Corridor Manchester and Manchester Digital Development Agency (MDDA) have appointed Geo to install new fibre optic cables that will allow residents and businesses on the Corridor – the Oxford Road area of the city – to directly connect to next generation fibre broadband, creating a true open access network which will revolutionise ways of working and using digital communications.

Jackie Potter, chief executive, Corridor Manchester said: “The installation of the new fibre optic cables will create a new infrastructure on the Corridor that will not only deliver much faster broadband speeds but through the open access network allow organisations, businesses and even individuals develop and test their own ideas for uses of the new technology without being held back by current limitations.”
The most immediate impact for people living and working on the Corridor will be much faster broadband capacity of 100 Megabits per second (Mbps) and more, critically, for both download and upload uses. Users will be able to buy services from different service providers on the network providing internet access, TV, telephone and other data services too, as the new network will be genuinely “open access” allowing all service providers to lease the optical fibre from Geo to provide services to their customers. There is also potential for services and applications to be made available for free without having to go through an internet service provider.
The Corridor network project is managed by MDDA and funded by the Northwest Regional Development Agency (NWDA). Once the first phase of fibre installation is completed, it is already planned to expand the fibre optic network to east Manchester and elsewhere in the city by using both the existing and planned Metrolink lines.
Damien Bourke, policy & partnership manager for NWDA, said: “This is the first step on a journey to help make Manchester an increasingly competitive international city – a city in which businesses can find new and sustainable markets which in turn will help drive the regional economy. What better place to start this process than the Oxford Road area, where next generation fibre broadband will only generate further wealth from the people, ideas and innovation that make the Corridor a unique place to do business.”
Geo was awarded the contract in December 2009 following a successful tender to deliver the first phase of the fibre-to-the-premises (FTTP) network in partnership with Manchester City Council (through MDDA). The initial phase will provide connectivity to 200 homes and businesses around the Corridor area of Manchester.
Geo is expected to start the first phase of network deployment in the spring. Further connections directly to 1500 homes and businesses, will be phased over the next 12 months.
Chris Smedley, chief executive, Geo said: “Geo is delighted to be working with Corridor Manchester and the MDDA to deliver this important infrastructure. Creating a true open access network with next generation fibre broadband capable of fully symmetrical world – leading broadband services will radically change the way people use the internet for business and social use. Geo’s unique business model is ideally suited to helping the UK to meet the challenge of building the new networks needed for the country to compete on the global stage and we are proud to be associated with this landmark initiative.
Update:
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7 comments on Geo to connect the Corridor to next generation fibre broadband
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Zach says:
January 14th, 2010 at 8:48 amThis is fabulous news – is there an agreed timeframe for the work to be carried out? When will the other parts of the city be connected?
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cyberdoyle mentions:
January 14th, 2010 at 9:12 amgo Geo.
kudos
keep up the good work Manchester and get the fibre to your people. Digitalbritain needs fibre to everyone, not this obsolete copper phone network. Rock on.
chris -
James Cunningham declares:
January 14th, 2010 at 12:39 pmGreat! Hurry up and look at Radcliffe in North Manchester! I’ll happily pay for a fast, reliable service. It’s been costing me good money for years waiting to get faster than a paltry 500-700kbps – my “broadband” is barely quicker than dial up!
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Mac observes:
January 14th, 2010 at 9:17 pmThis is FTTP (MDU/MTU) – not FTTH. You’ll still have copper. Simply put, FTTH is like each flat in a tower block getting its own fibre connection. FTTP is like a fibre connection to the basement of the tower, which is then shared. The same for businesses.
I don’t know the details, but I assume that GEO is only doing civils??? The important bit is when the actual network equipment (xPON, GPON to be specific) is dimensioned to provide services. Or… it could be active Ethernet (which I doubt).
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Lindsey Annison observes:
January 14th, 2010 at 10:19 pmI am currently in the USA visiting FTTH projects around the country to bring back information to the Uk about how to get on with the fibre build we so desperately need – both rural and urban.
I visited one project where build is just about to start in a rural town. They are putting in FTTH to 4000 signed up subscribers and passing approx 12000 more during a 120 day period. We should be doing the same to similar timescales in the UK. The expertise is available to do this and has been for some years.
Doing small scale projects might seem a good idea but it is an expensive route to the end game, especially when the hard evidence about the benefits of FTTH are well-documented. It is time the UK government, RDAs, consultants etc realised we need big build FTTH, not scaled, demo projects. We are already such a long way behind so many other countries with this.
Good on MDDA and Geo but raise the bar a bit, guys!
And please can we have accurate reporting (it’s Mbps not MBps) and more details – what backhaul is in the network? Are the user connections contended or dedicated? What technology is being used in the active and passive infrastructure? etc. Thanks!
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Paul Limbrick makes it known that:
January 15th, 2010 at 12:31 amre: Lindsey, 10:19pm (it’s Mbps not MBps)
Thanks for the feedback, this has now been updated. (We did originally qualify it as “bits” in the text to avoid ambiguity.)
As for more details, I would expect there to be further announcements and reports as the project progresses. Future articles will take the opportunity to address some of the common questions arising.
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Saan Alan declares:
August 6th, 2010 at 1:02 amThis project is very good idea bat i hope is not going to cost the consumer mach higher price as the authors!
Looking forward to see this project is successful.







