• 16 JUL 18
    • 0

    5G Enlightenment in a brave new world

    As opposition to the roll out of 5G antennas increases in America, Philips and the American Tower Company have come up with an innovative way to hide the thousands of ugly 5G antennas planned to be rolled out across America, and conveniently avoid those nasty community protests. Disguise them as heritage light poles! Nice that Philips and the American Tower Company can now offer enlightenment along with 5G….. Read on.

    Don

    **********

    From:

    Logo - Lux Review

    Surf City gets smart lights

    28 February 2018Â By Mark Halper

    SURF CITYÂ is getting smart lights “” with integral 4G and 5G connectivity.

    The Smart Fusion Poles are of a heritage design but boast a host of high tech capabilities, including intelligent sensors that can detect traffic conditions, parking spaces, and air quality. Picture: American Tower Company

    The popular surfing town of Huntington, California, is becoming the first city in world to install new hybrid streetlight and cellular transmitters with built-in 5G masts.

    The so-called Smart Fusion Poles are of a heritage design but boast a host of high tech capabilities, including intelligent sensors that can detect traffic conditions, parking spaces, and air quality, all connected to central information points and the cloud for distribution to individuals, city managers.

    The light fittings “” the result of a joint venture between Philips and Boston-based wireless communications specialist American Tower Company “” are expected to be installed along the city”™s coastal highway, Highway 1. A further tranche of fittings will illuminate the lively downtown area of shops, cafes, restaurants, and bars.

    The two companies made the announcement at the Mobile World Congress, the annual gathering of the mobile industry in Barcelona.

    While the Huntington Beach agreement marked a symbolic step forward for the concept of combining street lighting and mobile technologies, the three parties still have to work out certain details.

    A Philips and American Tower spokesperson told Lux sister publication LEDs Magazine that the city has not yet committed to a date to start installing the poles. The agreement gives Philips and American Tower the rights to as many as 200 existing street-light locations, but that does not mean that the city will install 200 new poles. And the current agreement does not include any smart city sensors, although they can be added later.

    American Tower owns the poles, and will lease out antenna space to mobile network operators. Advanced networks such as 5G should further help distribute information gathered by any eventual sensors, and could also provide the wireless conduit for lighting control and maintenance.

    Notably, the Huntington Beach arrangement does not presently call for CityTouch, the wireless remote management system that Philips has deployed in some 1,000 locations including Los Angeles, tapping cellular networks. Philips will provide its Hadco and Lumec luminaires.

    Fine print of the Huntington Beach deal aside, Mayor Mike Posey has a lively vision for the smart pole technology, emphasising the potential for innovative data uses as well as the aesthetics of a design that hides away the antennas.

    “˜We want to be a leader in smart city initiatives to provide residents, businesses, and visitors a better city experience and quality of life,”™ Posey said.’Equally important is the ability to maintain the aesthetics of this beautiful seaside city I call home. That”™s why I am excited about the Smart Fusion Pole; it provides the connectivity required for our smart city initiatives without sacrificing the beauty and vista of our city.’

    SNIP
    Some lighting industry enthusiasts believe that the emergence of 5G “” anticipated around 2020 “” will drive street lighting forward as the true backbone of smart city services. That”™s why lighting companies such as Finland”™s Helvar are participating in 5G trials.

    Philips and American Tower said that the exact location of the installations ‘will be determined pending the network needs of the mobile network operator as well as local residents and businesses in Huntington Beach.’

    Huntington Beach, which is between Los Angeles and San Diego, won trademark rights to the Surf City, USA moniker in 2008 in a legal dispute with Santa Cruz, California.

    http://luxreview.com/article/2018/02/5g-smart-lights-for-surf-city

    ********************************************************************************************

    Leave a reply →