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Historic Gilnockie Tower Takes Giant Leap Forward Into The Digital Age

It was one small step for man, one giant leap for when ultrafast, full fibre broadband arrived at remote Gilnockie Tower in Dumfries and Galloway.

The historic home of the Armstrong Clan, and counting astronaut Neil among its most famous visitors, Gilnockie Tower near Canonbie in Dumfries and Galloway is a 16th century tower originally built as a stronghold for a notorious reiving family.

In the latest chapter in its illustrious history, the restored tower has become one of the first premises in the area to upgrade and benefit from Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) technology, thanks to the programme.

All of the latest local properties reached by the rollout – in places like Southwick, Kirkcolm, Moniaive, Wigtown, Dalry and Corsock as well as Canonbie– can now connect to the most reliable and fastest residential broadband available[1] as Openreach engineers build more FTTP (also known as full fibre) to help harder-to-reach places join the digital revolution.

The Digital Scotland team met the tower’s project manager Ian Martin to hear about the giant technological leap forward, along with community project officer Stephen Chambers and Openreach engineer Alan Haig.

Ian Martin said: “Repairing the tower has been a long process – the fact that we are now able to have FTTP is truly out of this world.
“Astronaut and clan member of Neil Alden Armstrong visited the tower in the ‘70s when space travel was the very latest in technology – now we have the latest technology at Neil’s tower.
“In the New Year we plan to market the tower as a luxury wedding venue and having superfast wifi is another amenity which we can offer.”

The technology, which takes fibre directly to the premises. is capable of delivering the fastest residential broadband speeds in the UK – up to 1Gbps* – about 18 times faster than the current UK average.

The DSSB team has been out and about across Dumfries and Galloway over the last few weeks encouraging people to check if faster broadband is ‘Up-your-Street’ by visiting the Digital Scotland Superfast Broadband website. Local people need to sign up for the new services with an internet service provider, as upgrades are not automatic.

Across Dumfries and Galloway, more than 58,900 premises are now able to connect to fibre broadband through the programme.

Engineer Alan Haig said: “Technology shapes our lives in so many ways and good broadband is really vital to that.
“Gilnockie Tower is an amazing place – a historic site which is now bang up to date in the 21st century with some of the best connectivity in the country.
“It was brilliant to be involved in bringing full fibre broadband to such an unusual, remote location and to see the difference it will make to visitors.
“Like the moon landings, the Digital Scotland project has broken new ground – laying enough new fibre cable to stretch all the way from Gilnockie Tower to NASA HQ in Washington DC three times over.”

Delivered through two projects – led by Highlands and Islands Enterprise in its area and the Scottish Government in the rest of Scotland – Digital Scotland funding partners include the UK Government, BT Group, local authorities and the EU via the European Regional Development Fund.

Whether you own a business, work from home or want to keep in touch with friends and family, fibre broadband enables multiple users to connect to the internet at high speeds.

Most of the Digital Scotland deployment uses Fibre-to-the-Cabinet (FTTC) technology, at speeds of up to 80Mbps[1] but engineers have been building small deployments of full fibre technology where it’s the best answer for harder-to-reach communities and clusters.

 

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