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Central Office Upgrade and Expansion

Lafourche Telephone Company

Fail Engineering was selected by Lafourche Telephone Company, headquartered in Larose, Louisiana to prepare a proposal to provide triple play services via fiber to a new high end residential subdivision. The original plan to serve this subdivision was to construct an extension of the copper facilities out of an existing fiber fed remote for approximately 2.52 miles to provide POTS and DSL capabilities, along with a coax extension from the local existing CATV Company to provide video. The new project plan was to consist of providing fiber optic facilities to the Amaris Isle Plantation, a Greenfield development in the Grand Isle exchange. This development had approximately 160 lots that would ultimately need FTTH service. The initial requirements for service were estimated to be 32 homes.


The goal of the proposal was to provide design options for the provision of service via the following method:


Fiber to the Home triple play services through their telco utilizing a Passive Optical Network (PON) with an RF Overlay video solution to tie in the video signal from their CATV Company.

Designs were created to satisfy both the inside plant and outside plant elements of the project. In regard to the electronics for the FTTH option, Calix C7 and OSI Fiberpath solutions were considered. OSI was preferred due to its available GPON capabilities. Harmonics video couplers, amplifiers and combiners were selected to provide the RF Overlay function and a GR303 upgrade for the client’s Nortel DMS100/200 switching system was quoted.

In regard to the Outside Plant design, a Local Convergence Point (LCP) architecture was chosen with the splitters deployed in the cabinet at the entrance to the development. This architecture provided a fiber-rich distribution network that was provisioned to provide video, voice and data services to the entire development but allowed for a fiber-lean feeder. This architecture allowed for splitters to be deployed at one centralized location as growth occurred in the development as opposed to multiple locations. The direct-buried method of construction was to be used with pedestals being used as opposed to handholes to provide more convenient access to maintenance technicians. A two fiber drop with a 1” innerduct was deployed to each lot. This would allow the video and voice/data to be provided on separate fibers in the future if necessary. After careful consideration, the Central Switch Homerun architecture was not chosen due to the distance of the development from the central office and a low initial take rate. The distributed splitting architecture was also considered to serve this development but was not chosen. The additional cost of splitters deployed further in the distribution network would not provide enough savings as opposed to deploying a larger fiber count. Future growth and adaptability were also issues that were considered.


Contact: Tony Duet

Telephone: (504) 693-4567