Post navigation

Prev: (11/18/19) | Next: (11/19/19)

Anticipating wave of 5G demand, Seattle setting rules for how its pricey ‘Small Wireless Facility’ installations should look

It’s the season for City of Seattle feedback gathering. Next up, the Seattle Department of Transportation wants your input on how a small but important element of your telecom environment fits onto the streets of Capitol Hill and across the city.

Feedback on the city’s Small Wireless Facility (SWF) design standards are hoped help to reduce “visual impacts to the streets and sidewalks that form the public right-of-way”  — especially as 5G technology rolls out across the city:

Most often installed on poles in the public right-of-way, SWF are antennas and related equipment that are smaller than traditional cell towers and extend wireless network coverage. With more people using smart phones and relying on mobile connectivity, wireless providers will need to increase the capacity of their networks and will want to install more SWF throughout Seattle.

The city’s new proposed design standards would apply to devices installed on both metal and wood poles in Seattle’s right-of-way including telephone poles and streetlights.

Unlike cell towers, the small wireless facilities look like small antenna boxes installed on existing infrastructure like utility poles. Fiber connections can allow the devices to quickly handle huge amounts of data.

Seattle SWF draft design standards would establish maximum dimensions for any device installed on poles and set a maximum height increase for replacement poles.

The design standards don’t include whatever fees providers are paying to have the hardware installed on the city’s poles. Seattle plans to charge providers $1,947 per pole attachment, per year, Geekwire reports.

The full design standards proposal is here (PDF).

Comments may be submitted online or by e-mail at [email protected] through November 27th at 5 PM.

 

HELP KEEP CHS PAYWALL-FREE
Subscribe to CHS to help us hire writers and photographers to cover the neighborhood. CHS is a pay what you can community news site with no required sign-in or paywall. To stay that way, we need you.

Become a subscriber to help us cover the neighborhood for as little as $5 a month

 
Subscribe and support CHS Contributors -- $1/$5/$10 per month

1 Comment
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Bill Nicholson
Bill Nicholson
4 years ago

What about regulations for safety? “Small wireless facilities” should not be allowed to be installed within 1000 feet of any home, school, daycare, or office building. 5G is not safe for people, plants, or animals and I do not want it in my neighborhood. The 1,947$ per year per device is nowhere near enough to pay for all of the lawsuits that will be popping up when people find out they’re getting cancer from being close to these devices. City of Seattle will be just as liable for implementing this infrastructre as the companies who own the tech.