Converge Digest

Virginia Fiber Express Targets 2027 Service for Non-I-95 Data Center Route

Virginia Fiber Express Networks (VFE Networks) secured Competitive Local Exchange Carrier (CLEC) and Interexchange Carrier (IXC) operating licenses and a Land Use permit from the Commonwealth of Virginia, clearing key regulatory steps for Phase 1 of its planned regional fiber network. The Reston-based company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Infraforward Strategies, plans to build the initial 126-mile (203-km) route between Northern Virginia and the Richmond-Sandston area with Virginia-based partners Express Technologies (Express-tek) and S&N Infrastructure.

Phase 1 will use rights-of-way outside the Interstate 95 corridor to provide an alternative fiber path between Northern Virginia and central Virginia. VFE Networks is targeting hyperscalers, AI data centers, multi-tenant data centers (MTDCs), network service providers, and data center developers seeking physically diverse connectivity as data center development expands beyond established Northern Virginia markets. The company plans to offer conduit and dark fiber indefeasible rights of use (IRUs), capacity leases, dark fiber, wavelength services, and spectrum services.

VFE Networks said it is designing the infrastructure to support 800G and 1.6T DWDM wavelength services. Express-tek will provide fiber engineering and permitting expertise, while S&N Infrastructure will contribute construction capabilities developed through more than 40 years of communications infrastructure projects across the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast. The companies plan to begin construction following completion of licensing and initial permitting, with a targeted Ready for Service date in 2027. The release describes Phase 1 as the first segment of a broader network intended to connect current and future data center campuses across the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast.

• Phase 1 route: 126 miles (203 km) between Northern Virginia and Richmond-Sandston

• Route diversity: Rights-of-way outside the Interstate 95 corridor

• Regulatory milestones: Virginia CLEC and IXC operating licenses and an initial Land Use permit

• Services planned: Conduit, dark fiber IRUs, capacity leases, wavelength services, and spectrum services

• Optical roadmap: Network design targeting 800G and 1.6T DWDM wavelength services

• Deployment partners: Express-tek for engineering and permitting and S&N Infrastructure for communications infrastructure construction

• Target customers: Hyperscalers, AI data centers, MTDC operators, network service providers, and data center developers

• Ready for Service target: 2027

“These licenses and permit unlock our ability to build and operate infrastructure designed for the demands of the data center industry pushing south out of an increasingly constrained Northern Virginia market,” said Joel M. Allen, CEO of Virginia Fiber Express Networks. “Our diverse, non-I-95/ Route 1 route and interconnected network phases reflect a commitment to infrastructure that is resilient, future-proof and purpose-built to support autonomous network deployment while being aligned with Virginia’s long-term support of broadband expansion.”

🌐 Analysis: VFE Networks is entering a Mid-Atlantic fiber market where AI infrastructure development is increasing demand for physically diverse routes, dark fiber, and high-capacity optical transport between data center clusters. The planned alternative to the I-95 corridor could provide another connectivity option as operators expand infrastructure south of Northern Virginia and seek route diversity between established and emerging data center markets.

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