Ohio-based broadband company Horizon says it has launched construction of a new fiber-optic network into Dayton, OH. The new infrastructure will extend the reach of Horizon’s present fiber network, which comprises 4,500 route miles serving more than 40 counties throughout Ohio and surrounding states (see, for example, "Horizon to buy Indianapolis fiber-optic network" and "Horizon completes Phase 1 of Columbus fiber network deployment").
Horizon says the new fiber will be deployed in downtown, mid-town, inner-east, and south Dayton along with surrounding Dayton University. It also will touch nearly two hundred 5G small cell sites. The fiber-optic network will incorporate route protection and equipment redundancy within Horizon’s core network. Horizon says it plans to use the infrastructure to offer enterprise-grade fiber Ethernet, internet, hosted voice, wavelength, and dark fiber service. Horizon adds it will be able to interconnect multiple carriers and provide direct connections to several data centers within the area.
The company says the project’s preparation and engineering stages are complete. While some of the fiber network is expected to be operational this year, most of the infrastructure will be available for new customers by mid-2021.
“We have worked closely with community leadership and the Dayton Development Coalition to ensure we are maximizing the initial build design to capture the needs of the business region to its fullest capacity,” stated Glenn Lytle, Horizon’s chief revenue officer. “We are also very excited about the new sales team we have hired to help us not only extend our network and products to the area, but also bring a very local ‘partnership’ sales approach to our newest market.”
“We have taken great care at making sure we engineer a network that will help to densify the region and supply popular business districts and Dayton developmental sites with the fastest and most reliable connectivity available,” added Jim Capuano, Horizon CEO. “Our mission has been to invest in our fiber footprint and prepare rural and urban communities for the data needs of tomorrow.”
For related articles, visit the Network Design Topic Center.
For more information on high-speed transmission systems and suppliers, visit the Lightwave Buyer’s Guide.
To stay abreast of fiber network deployments, subscribe to Lightwave’s Service Providers and Datacom/Data Center newsletters.