The Scotsman

A digital highway to bridge the Forth

- By DOUGLAS BARRIE

The Forth Road Bridge is to be used for cable carrying ultrafast internet to the town lying in its shadow, creating a "digital highway".

Openreach Scotland engineers will use a giant air compressor today to blow a continuous, threekilom­etre stretch of glass fibre right across the bridge at speeds of up to 60 metres per minute.

The new 16mm fibre cable – containing 432 tiny glass fibres, each a tenth the size of a human hair – will deliver gigabitcap­able internet services to thousands of residents and businesses in South Queensferr­y.

A further two kilometres of fibre have been built to the bridge's north approach, with the new network linking back to a main fibre hub in Inverkeith­ing, Fife.

Katie Milligan, Openreach Scotland board chairwoman, said: "This is a unique moment for civil engineerin­g in Scotland as two huge infrastruc­ture projects come together.

"We're building a new ultrafast digital highway – and going across the Forth Road Bridge is the fastest, most direct way to get it done. It's impossible to join up spans of fibre on the bridge, so it has to be done in one long piece.

"This is a once-in-a-generation engineerin­g task to make broadband fit for the future, and we're proud to be literally bridging the digital divide across this iconic landmark.

"As we saw during lockdown, good connectivi­ty reduces pressures on our road network, and can cut emissions, by giving many Scots the ability to work where they live. It's great to see the Forth Road Bridge play a part in a new digital era."

 ??  ?? 0 Openreach engineer on the Forth Road Bridge
0 Openreach engineer on the Forth Road Bridge

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