Govt announces first NBN sites in NSW, VIC, QLD, SA

Renai LeMay
02 March 2010, 4:08 PM


Embattled comms minister Stephen Conroy has turned attention away from ISP filtering with news of what suburbs will get access to the national fibre-to-the-home network first.


The National Broadband Network will be rolled out to five “first release” trial sites in mainland Australia starting shortly, NBN Co announced today, with construction to be finished by early 2011.

NBN Co chief Mike Quigley said the construction of NBN fibre-optic infrastructure in the trial sites – with 3,000 houses in each to be hooked up, except in smaller locations with less dwellings — would provide the company with real-world information that would allow the company to validate its construction methods and network design.

The sites have been chosen to reflect the diversity of geographical situations the company will encounter as it rolls out the network in a wider sense across the nation.

“As we have an obligation to build a ubiquitous fibre network available to 90 percent of premises, we need to understand the challenges of different locations and prepare to use different construction and design methods in every type of geography,” Quigley said in a statement issued by the company today.

“We have selected a suburban area where we need to connect semi-detached houses, detached houses and apartment blocks,” he said. “We have also selected a smaller rural town with more dispersed housing, and three other sites representing a mix of major regional, smaller regional and differing climate and geography.

Detailed coverage maps are available on the NBN Co’s web site, but the sites are:

  • A part of the suburb of Brunswick in Melbourne
  • An area of Townsville covering parts of the suburbs of Aitkenvale and Mundinburra
  • Minnamurra and Kiama Downs (south of Wollongong)
  • An area of west Armidale, NSW (including the University of New England)
    Willunga in South Australia

To aid with the construction, NBN Co has issued a request for proposal document, asking companies to respond. It said it would then enter a “detailed design phase”, which will take several months to complete, involving site examination by network planners. It has also pledged to consult with the community during this phase.

The actual construction phase is expected to start early in the second half of 2010, with three stages:

  • Deployment of the ‘passive’ components of the network – such as optic fibre
  • Deployment of ‘active’ network equipment in what the company said were “fibre access nodes”
  • Working with retail service providers to give them access to the network – so that they can provide services to end users.

The Tasmanian branch of the NBN Co is also engaged in rolling out test sites and backbone fibre.

Delimiter


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Tin (Regular user):

Looks like a fair amount of nothing to connect in the Armidale one. About half the area covered is UNE, UNE related, or empty land. Browse the areas north of UNE in Google Streetview, and you'll see a lot of varying length grass.

02 March 2010, 5:19 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Phred (User):

Quoting Tin:
you'll see a lot of varying length grass

I'm sure it's changed in the 2 years since it was photographed... ;O)


02 March 2010, 5:31 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

Quoting Phred:
I'm sure it's changed in the 2 years since it was photographed... ;O)


I haven't been over there for about 7 years, but the street view photos look pretty much exactly as I was remembering it. It could have changed but it's unlikely. Armidale isn't a suburb of Sydney, so it's not expanding at ludicrous speed.

02 March 2010, 8:05 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Phred (User):

Quoting Tin:
About half the area covered is UNE


And I just wonder how much UNE has paid to be a part of this 'Trial Site'

02 March 2010, 5:36 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

petert (Advanced Forumologist):

I live in Armidale and I'm a bit surprised at the area they chose. Depending on how West Armidale is going to be defined, there is quite a lot of housing; however, there are large areas of low income house-holds that I doubt will be able to afford NBN or any other form of Internet connection and quite a bit of open land. I am wondering if West Armidale was chosen because of the industrial areas around Miller St? Perhaps NBN was looking for a mix of housing, industrial, commercial and other purpose (such as the Uni). Mind you, the Uni is really quite remote from what I would define as West Armidale! Otherwise, I would have thought North or South Armidale to be far better choices because of larger areas of housing and much higher incomes. Nonetheless, South Armidale is too remote form the Uni, if it indeed has had any influence on the decision.

02 March 2010, 6:14 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

petert (Advanced Forumologist):

After the original post, I realised there was a link to a map of the proposed site. Having seen the map, I am really surprised! NBN have completely missed the industrial and commercial areas. The area they proposed has vast tracts of open land, mostly owned by the Uni. What is left is housing, but a fair proportion of that housing is quite low income - especially the area around Girraween (west of the round-about on Queen Elizabeth Drive). To try to be PC, Most of those people barely afford alcohol and occasional groceries; they'll never pay for NBN! Much of the rest of the area around Girraween is housing that is rented by Uni students - who also have no money to pay for NBN! The area chosen for the trial has left me flabbergasted. I'm sure NBN has a rationale for its choice, but that nature of that rationale eludes me!

02 March 2010, 6:25 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (User):

What I'm trying to figure out is how these trials can be meaningful, given the absence of resolution of the issue of access to Telstra ducts.
THE NBN Co website (Funniest site since NWAT) gives some clue in their FAQ with suggestion of fibre strung between power poles.

Looks like this one will be a repeat of the cable-TV roll-out debarcle with all the planning of a dollars first home insulation scheme.

03 March 2010, 11:17 AM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

grantreibelt (New user):

has anyone checked to see if these areas are marginal seats?

could be pump-priming for the election.....

05 March 2010, 1:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

petert (Advanced Forumologist):

Armidale is definitely not marginal. At State level we are represented by Richard Torbay and at Federal level by Tony Windsor. Both are Independents with some of the highest primary votes of any politician in Australia. Even if the vote was to hypothetically swing away from them (a situation at this time that is highly implausible), it would be more likely to go to the National Party than to the Labor Party.

05 March 2010, 2:18 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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