AT&T says it now has Gigabit plans for up to 100 towns and cities in the US, with some deployments expected to start in 2014.

Dan Jones, Mobile Editor

April 21, 2014

5 Min Read
AT&T Turns Up Gig Heat in 21 New Metros

AT&T is ratcheting up the pressure in the Gigabit Internet competition against Google and others in the US, revealing plans to deploy broadband at speeds up to 1 Gbit/s in at least 21 new major metro areas -- assuming the carrier can make the right deal with municipal officials.

AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) said Monday that it plans to begin talks with municipalities in those 21 metro areas to deploy a fiber network that will deliver broadband speeds up to 100 times faster than traditional broadband -- as well as TV service. AT&T says that the plans could see it deploy its "U-verse with GigaPower" service in up to 100 US cities and municipalities.

The list of 21 candidate metropolitan areas includes Atlanta, Augusta, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland, Fort Worth, Fort Lauderdale, Greensboro, Houston, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Miami, Nashville, Oakland, Orlando, San Antonio, San Diego, St. Louis, San Francisco, and San Jose.

AT&T will "work with local leaders in the proposed markets to discuss ways to accelerate deployment timing and expand the availability of fiber broadband in their communities," the company said in a statement. "The communities with suitable infrastructure and that show the strongest investment cases, based on anticipated demand and the most receptive policies, will influence these future selections and coverage maps within selected areas."

An AT&T spokeswoman tells Light Reading in an email that work on the new service could start in some areas in 2014. "We do expect construction and deployment to begin in some communities this year."

AT&T has already started a slower version of the GigaPower service in Austin, Texas. It expects to hit the 1-Gbit/s target this year. It also expects to bring Gigabit fiber to parts of Dallas and North Carolina.(See AT&T's Austin GigaPower Debuts at 300 Mbit/s and AT&T's Going to Carolina With 1 Gig.)

AT&T says that it has now announced potential plans to deploy Gigabit fiber in 25 metropolitan areas:

Metropolitan Area

Municipalities

Atlanta

Alpharetta, Atlanta, Decatur, Duluth, Lawrenceville, Lithonia, McDonough, Marietta, Newnan, Norcross, and Woodstock

Augusta

Augusta

Austin (Already servicing with fiber)

Charlotte

Charlotte, Gastonia, and Huntersville

Chicago

Chicago, Des Plaines, Glenview, Lombard, Mount Prospect, Naperville, Park Ridge, Skokie, and Wheaton

Cleveland

Akron, Barberton, Bedford, Canton, Cleveland, and Massillon

Dallas Dallas (already announced), Farmer's Branch, Frisco, Grand Prairie, Highland Park, Irving, Mesquite, Plano, Richardson, and University Park

Fort Lauderdale

Fort Lauderdale

Fort Worth

Arlington, Euless, Fort Worth, and Haltom City

Greensboro

Greensboro

Jacksonville

Jacksonville and St. Augustine

Houston

Galveston, Houston, Katy, Pasadena, Pearland, and Spring

Kansas City

Independence, Kansas City, Leawood, Overland Park, and Shawnee

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Miami

Hialeah, Hollywood, Homestead, Miami, Opa-Locka and Pompano Beach

Nashville

Clarksville, Franklin, Murfreesboro, Nashville, Smyrna and Spring Hill

Oakland

Oakland

Orlando

Melbourne, Oviedo, Orlando, Palm Coast, Rockledge, and Sanford

Raleigh-Durham

Apex, Garner and Morrisville, (Carrboro, Cary, Chapel Hill, Durham, Raleigh were already announced.)

St. Louis and metro area

Chesterfield, Edwardsville, Florissant, Granite City, and St. Louis

San Antonio

San Antonio

San Diego

San Diego

San Francisco

San Francisco

San Jose

Campbell, Cupertino, Mountain View, and San Jose

Winston-Salem

Winston-Salem (already announced)

Source: AT&T Inc.

Google helped to kickstart the fiber trend with its Kansas City rollout in 2012 and was first to promise similar speeds in Austin.

Google Fiber said in February that it is targeting 34 cities in the nine metro markets for possible Gigabit services. The Google unit said it plans to decide where to build its FTTH networks next by the end of the year. (See Google Fiber Shifts Into High Gear and Google Casts a Wide Wireless Net.)

Some of the stated plans for Gigabit deployment from AT&T and Google appear to overlap, notably in Atlanta, Nashville, San Antonio, and North Carolina. Of course, it is possible that some of the stated aims of both companies might not happen if they don't reach agreements with municipalities.

AT&T says the newly revealed Gigabit plans will not affect its expected capex spend in 2014.

— Dan Jones, Mobile Editor, Light Reading

About the Author(s)

Dan Jones

Mobile Editor

Dan is to hats what Will.I.Am is to ridiculous eyewear. Fedora, trilby, tam-o-shanter -- all have graced the Jones pate during his career as the go-to purveyor of mobile essentials.

But hey, Dan is so much more than 4G maps and state-of-the-art headgear. Before joining the Light Reading team in 2002 he was an award-winning cult hit on Broadway (with four 'Toni' awards, two 'Emma' gongs and a 'Brian' to his name) with his one-man show, "Dan Sings the Show Tunes."

His perfectly crafted blogs, falling under the "Jonestown" banner, have been compared to the works of Chekhov. But only by Dan.

He lives in Brooklyn with cats.

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