Lightpath will expand its dense NYC metropolitan fiber network to support major national wireless service providers across more than 2,400 macro cell tower locations in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey.
The project adds 265 planned route miles of new fiber construction and extends Lightpath’s 12,100-route-mile fiber infrastructure footprint. The deployment will use Lightpath’s existing high-capacity core backbone to deliver 100 Gbps and 400 Gbps aggregation links to multiple customer endpoints.
Lightpath said more than half of the endpoints will use existing fiber infrastructure, with some locations representing second, third, or fourth tenants on the same owned network assets. The company framed the expansion as part of its broader strategy to build fiber with anchor customers, then lease capacity across additional customer verticals including wireless backhaul, hyperscale, cloud, data center, and enterprise connectivity.
• More than 2,400 macro cell tower locations covered across CT, MA, NY, and NJ
• 265 new route miles planned across the greater NYC metro area
• 100 Gbps and 400 Gbps aggregation links supported
• Optical transport available up to 800 Gbps
• Services include Ethernet, dedicated internet access, dark fiber, private networks, and wavelength connectivity
• Lightpath operates 12,100 route miles across 11 U.S. metro markets
• Lightpath is jointly owned by Optimum Communications and Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners
“This expansion demonstrates our ability to invest deeply in dense fiber infrastructure, in this case expanding within the NYC metropolitan area with follow-on commercialization via lease-up of those assets across multiple customer verticals and use cases,” said Chris Morley, CEO at Lightpath. “Wireless backhaul at this scale is one part of a broader lease-up story playing out across our footprint, and the economics of layering additional tenants onto owned fiber are difficult to replicate.”
🌐 Analysis: The announcement highlights the continued convergence of wireless backhaul, enterprise fiber, cloud connectivity, and data center interconnect requirements in major metro markets. For Lightpath, the key metric is not only the 265 new route miles, but the reuse of existing fiber assets across multiple tenants, which supports a denser metro fiber economics model as wireless providers prepare for higher-capacity 5G and future 6G transport needs.
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