The first clutch of homes to be connected to the 100Mbps Fibrecity network currently being built in Bournemouth will be hooked up by the end of March.
The super-fast seaside broadband network is being built by sewer fibre-laying company H2O Networks, and is wholly funded by private-equity investment.
The first 30 homes to get fibre are located in postcode areas BH10 and BH11, with approximately 40 percent of the 12,000 homes in the area having opted in to the network so far.
Across Bournemouth as a whole, the opt-in rate is lower — around 20 percent of its 85,000 homes — which according to a Fibrecity spokeswoman could be as result of a greater marketing effort to homes in the first rollout areas.
Work officially started last October on the Bournemouth network and is due to be completed "towards the end of 2010", the spokeswoman said. Once complete, Bournemouth will be able to boast the largest fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) deployment in the UK, according to H2O.
Third-party service providers, such as ISPs, have not yet been revealed but the Fibrecity spokeswoman told ZDNet UK's sister site, silicon.com, an announcement is "very imminent".
Bournemouth won the race to become the UK's first 'Fibrecity' back in May, beating competition from Dundee and Northampton.
H2O is also building a fibre network in Dundee — with work due to start on the first Scottish Fibrecity this year.
Cable broadband provider Virgin Media recently launched a 50Mbps broadband service which, while not a true FTTH deployment, is currently the fastest consumer broadband service in the UK. Virgin aims to have the service available to all its 12 million customers by the end of this summer. Meanwhile telco BT has also unveiled fibre-based plans, announcing a £1.5bn investment to bring fibre to 10 million UK homes by 2012.








Talkback
This is a great stride forward in the efforts to get all Britain on a superfast broadband with sufficient bandwidth to handle the users without problems. But, as usual, the Government has done little or nothing, despite the usual frequent ministerial meaningless speeches, to actually get fibre laid.
A very good start would be for construction regulations to require developers to install fibre ducting throughout any developments so that future "fibreing" can be simply and easily hooked up. Possibly the ducting should be sufficient to easily accommodate any present and foreseeable cabling needs.
I'm curently running a small site from Bournemouth about this, and am collecting information on this rollout the best I can. I have a rough map of where this is at the moment. It's a very small area, so I wouldn't suggest you get TOO excited if you're in Bournemouth. Seems slow progress so far.
http://www.fibreforum.co.uk