City builds open-access broadband network with Google Fiber as its first ISP

W. Des Moines to build fiber conduits city-wide, let multiple ISPs offer service. …

Illustration of fiber-optic cables.

Enlarge / Illustration of fiber-optic cables.
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Google Fiber’s wireline broadband is expanding to a new city for the first time in several years as part of a public-private partnership to build an open-access network that any ISP can use to offer service. The new network will be in West Des Moines, Iowa.

Google Fiber “paused” plans to expand to new cities in October 2016 amid lawsuits filed by incumbent ISPs and construction problems that eventually led to the Alphabet-owned ISP’s complete exit from Louisville. But in West Des Moines, Google Fiber will rely on the city to build a network of fiber conduits.

“Municipalities like West Des Moines excel at building and maintaining infrastructure. At digging and laying pipes under the roads, restoring and preserving the sidewalks and green spaces, reducing traffic congestion, and lowering construction disruption,” Google Fiber said in an announcement yesterday.

The West Des Moines government’s announcement said that “once the City installs conduit in the public right of way, broadband providers will pay a license fee to install their fiber in the City’s conduit. Google Fiber will be the first tenant in the network.” A conduit-license agreement “calls for Google Fiber to cover a portion of the construction cost to build conduit… through their monthly lease payments.”

“On a monthly basis, Google Fiber would pay the city $2.25 for each household that connects to the network,” according to the Des Moines Register. Google Fiber would pay the

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