log in
subscribe
register for E-Newsletters
submit news or data
search:
Need sales leads?
Search for valuable lists, directories and articles

Find it. Download it.
Sort it. Use it.
And reap the benefits.
RSS
subscribe
Subscribe
Customer Service
Newsstand/Rack Locations
Submit
News
Data
podcasts
Chris Wood
more

departments
After Hours
Awards
Business Digest
Corrections
Economic Indicators
Editorial Cartoon
Events
ExecStyle
Leads / Public Records
Letters to Editor
Nonprofit Network
On the Job
Product Update
Stepping Out
Stocks
calendar mini calendar
February 2010 
S M T W T F S

     
Submit an event
Register for an BCBR Event

weather
Boulder, CO
18°F
Cloudy
BCBR Poll
How will you help a nonprofit organization this year?

 Donate money
 Volunteer time
 Donate money and volunteer time
 I will not donate money or volunteer time


Results |  More polls
special publications
About BCBR Daily
Advertise with BCBR
Blueprints
Book of Experts
Book of Lists
Economic Indicators
Event Planning Guide
Front Range Golf Guide
Giving Guide
Privacy Policy
Terms & Conditions
services
About BCBR
Advertising Info
Contact Us
Editorial Calendar
FAQ
BCBR Store
Reprints
Site Map
Facebook

LinkedIn
Twitter
Log in here 
PRODUCTSSEARCHPROFILEADD DATACONTACTSUBSCRIBE

Shopping Cart (0 items)

Article details

Print version

Look Front Range, no wires

10 cities join forces to bring wireless Internet to region

12/08/2006

Source: Boulder County Business Report

Author: Caron Schwartz Ellis

If all goes according to plan, residents, businesses, institutions and visitors in 10 Front Range communities will have Wi-Fi access anywhere in those cities by mid-2008.

In September, a partnership of 10 Colorado communities - Arvada, Boulder, Broomfield, Golden, Lakewood, Louisville, Northglenn, Superior, Thornton and Wheat Ridge - formed Colorado Wireless Communities, a group committed to providing broadband wireless technology in the Front Range.

A request for proposals should be released early next year, with vendor selection later in the spring, said Chris Puccio, director of information technology for the city of Boulder.

Like many other citywide Wi-Fi projects, Colorado Wireless Communities, which Puccio refers to as CWC, will partner with an experienced Internet provider to build and manage the network.

EarthLink, for example, is building and will manage the municipal wireless networks in Philadelphia, Anaheim and Milpitas, Calif. San Francisco is still negotiating with EarthLink for its network.

The process to get to bid is taking longer than Puccio would have liked because he is working with nine other communities. In April, when Puccio initially proposed a Boulder-only Wi-Fi network to city council, he thought the process would be well under way by now.

But although it's taking longer to organize, the regional approach makes more business sense to a potential partner, Puccio said. The combined cities include 620,000 residents in 197 square miles.

Only the cities, not the unincorporated county areas between them, will be a part of the network. And the CWC could always expand.

"We have interest from Denver, Aurora, Westminster," Puccio said. "The 10 cities - this is what we're going out to bid with. Once we build this area, we'll be in close partnership with (the Internet service provider partner), and then we can expand. A few years down the road I'd like to see this blanket the entire Denver metro area."

The CWC hired Civitium LLC, an Alpharetta, Ga.-based consulting firm for municipal governments and institutions that are considering similar networks, to conduct feasibility studies and help write the request for proposal, conduct the selection process and decide on a single provider.

Back in April Boulder, city council approved Puccio's request to spend $24,000 on initial feasibility studies conducted by Civitium. Since then all 10 CWC cities have pitched in $13,800 a piece to pay for the rest of Civitium's work.

Installing such a network costs about $150,000 per square mile, according to research done by New York-based JupiterResearch. The cost for the 197-square-mile CWC area would be roughly $29.5 million. Yearly costs are estimated to be about one-third of that investment - about $9.8 million in the region - to support the network including marketing, help desk, customer service, technical support and maintenance, Puccio said.

It is too early to estimate how much the service will cost users, Puccio said.

In October, Muniwireless.com, a Web site that tracks the municipal wireless industry, predicted that more than $3 billion will be spent over the next four years to build and operate public wireless networks for U.S. municipalities.

Contact Caron Schwartz Ellis at 303-440-4950 or csellis@bcbr.com.

On the Web

>

www.coloradowirelesscommunities.com.

©2010 Boulder County Business Report. All rights reserved. | Powered by FLEX360

This service is provided on BCBR's standard Terms & Conditions.

read our Privacy Policy.