back to article Muswell Hillbillies force BT to move broadband boxes

BT has been ordered to move 20 of the bulkier new streetside cabinets planned to power its trial of faster broadband, after they offended aesthetic sensibilities in leafy Muswell Hill, north London. The local council, Haringey, is also arranging for all the boxes to be repainted black rather than their current green, to "blend …

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  1. Rab Sssss
    Grenade

    Why not...

    just telll em no cabinets no faster BB...

  2. Andy ORourke
    Joke

    BT are welcome

    To build a new exchange in my garden if they like, rent free, just give me better than 1 meg on my "up to" 20 Meg line :-(

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Coat

    quite right too.

    I don't want my little angel irradiated by these porn mongering internet boxes. They could've at least made them organic. What's even worse is the terrible view given to me by one of the engineers bending over to look into one of these things. Dear little Porscher's eyes burned.

    1. RichyS

      Car name or Latin name?

      I suspect the organic lentil munching residents of Muswell Hill will spell their daughter's name 'Portia'. Calling your daughter 'Porsche' is a bit too Premiership footballer...

  4. Paul_Murphy
    Coat

    Could BT subcontract the work.

    To Virgin?

    Cable would be faster, probably cheaper to install and less intrusive.

    I'll get my coat.

    ttfn

  5. Tzael
    Boffin

    In the ground?

    How about sinking the boxes so they are half buried? A hydraulic platform can be implemented to raise the cabinet out of the ground fully when work needs to be done. Sure it might cost BT a bit more, but it's a concept that can be taken further to the point of having the cabinets completely submerged in the pavement unless the equipment contained within requires maintenance.

    The only drawback to submersion of equipment is existing utility equipment already buried in the pavement. Suitable sites will be limited because of this.

    1. Matt Ryan
      Thumb Down

      Waterproof

      I assume sitting in a nice hole in the ground the electronics would have wellies to keep them dry?

    2. James Thomas

      Except for...

      ...flooding. Probably with tramp piss.

      1. Marty
        Joke

        no tramps im Muswell Hill

        they are not aesthetically pleasing enough,..

        maybe el-reg can do a compertiton for us commentards to design a cabnet that will fit in in Muswell Hill.... or a second comp to design a tramp cover so that the nice folk of Haringey are not subject to endure the reality of modern life..

        my design for a tramp cover would be a large brick construction, with multiple devisions, with glass openings to let in light and fresh air.. that can cover up several tramps.... i would build my tramp cover on the site that currently is occupied by Haringey Social services,,,, be3cause we know how useless they are....

        Joke alert, because haringay/muswell hill are just that !!

    3. GettinSadda
      FAIL

      In the ground?

      "How about sinking the boxes so they are half buried? A hydraulic platform can be implemented to raise the cabinet out of the ground fully when work needs to be done."

      Yeah - that platform would also come in handy to be able to raise it after any rain to allow the water to drain out of the equipment!

      1. Tzael
        Grenade

        @ Matt Ryan, James Thomas, GettinSadda, Alan Firminger

        It's hardly a miracle in scientific advancement to ensure that a) the cabinet is waterproof and b) there is a drainage channel. Sheesh, if man was able to implement the marvel of London's sewer system in the 1860s then I'm sure that tapping a drainage port between each cabinet and existing roadside sewer channels will be child's play with today's technology.

        You do realise that there are a number of existing deployments of submerged infrastructure across the UK that works on the exact principle I described originally? BT's own infratructure across the Highlands of Scotland already uses submerged cabinet structures that rise up when maintenance is required. These were deployed at the end of the 90s in order to eliminate telegraph poles from the majority of the countryside.

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Boffin

      Several suggestions of water...

      None of the idiots at the council resurfacing the pavement, and completely covering over the aperture?

      http://thereifixedit.com/2009/11/28/awkward-fire-hydrant-is-awkward/

    5. David S
      FAIL

      Unless...

      ...the issue you've come to fix is a failure in the hydraulics. Possibly caused by corrosion from little Portia's grateful tears.

  6. MinionZero
    Joke

    As Muswell Hill is about 2 miles from Tottenham...

    ...then I'm guessing the boxes in Tottenham will be painted to match the graffiti covered burnt our cars with no tyres on bricks. :)

  7. Julian Whitehead
    Thumb Down

    Please come and install in Wimborne

    Please please come and install in Wimborne in Dorset!

    We would not worry about the design of the 'street furniture'!

    Get on with it BT and local councils!

  8. pctechxp
    WTF?

    Maybe we should

    Deport them to the States so they can go and live anongst the Amish and not hold back the country.

    Sodding luddites!

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Stop

      Pedant alert!

      Think you'll find that the original luddites were not against technology. They were all for it, providing people's rights were respected and people were not made destitute by scumbag companies, hellbent on trampling small cottage industry under foot!

  9. Balefire
    Pint

    F@ck 'em

    I'm finding it dificult to choose which side to be on - one part of me says "F@cking NIMBYs - why give them faster broadband when they obviously don't want it" while the other says "if BT get away with putting these oversized cabinets in conservation areas, you can bet that the mobile operators will be clamouring to get their radiation emitters^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H telephone masts put up in the same area."

    If these bastards are complaining about slow broadband as well, then fuck 'em. Give it to someone who wants it and do not care if these boxes are the size of an elephant in bright purple with fluorescent yellow spots.

    Beer coz it helps me forget

  10. Anonymous Coward
    Badgers

    @RichyS

    Point taken. The child would be called either Saab or Twingo. Bless its little free range socks.

  11. David Austin

    title.

    Fuck 'em.

    I know many parts of the country that would be happy to have anything this side of a transit van sitting in the street, if it meant they had enough netspeed to watch iplayer or youtube without buffering

    Rip out the ADSL2 kit out while you're at it - leave them with a small, unobtrusive 28.8k modem cabinet.

    1. Stef 4

      not hard

      "Fuck 'em.

      I know many parts of the country that would be happy to have anything this side of a transit van sitting in the street, if it meant they had enough netspeed to watch iplayer or youtube without buffering

      Rip out the ADSL2 kit out while you're at it - leave them with a small, unobtrusive 28.8k modem cabinet."

      Well, tell those people to move closer to an exchange and pay BT money. Then they will get their broadband.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Liberal!

      Now you're sounding like a nampy pampy liberal.

      28.8k?

      What's wrong with two cups and a wet bit of string, or would that be deemed unsightly in such a posh area?

      1. Richard Morris
        Coat

        Why not taunt them?

        Rather than a 28.8K modem, how about giving them a V.90 modem, just to give them a little hope... and then put a DACS on the line.........

  12. Anonymous Coward
    Boffin

    Pics?

    Can we have a pic or two of these garguantuan cabinets to we can judge for ourselves whether they are really a pavement obstruction and general eyesore, or whether the Muswell lot are being muppets.

  13. Bassey

    Nice one BT

    So BT, given the WHOLE of the UK to choose from to put it's new Jumbo Cabinets, went for a conservation area with complex planning laws and stuck-up residents who have no problem parking a car the size of the Titanic outside their houses but baulk at the idea of a 1.6m tall telecoms cabinet.

    Great work BT!

  14. James Thomas
    WTF?

    What the hell is the problem with you people?

    Conservation area or not, BT has a blatant disregard for the environs when it installs boxes - new or old - and that monsterous green colour should have gone years ago. I don't see why residents shouldn't have a say in what they do to the area, especially since this a trial and BT should now be more aware when it rolls it out elsewhere.

    Or maybe where you all live is already an ugly shithole so you don't care?

    1. Jamie Jones Silver badge

      hear hear

      mod this post up!

      I can't believe so many people seem to think it's ok to just shove big ugly boxes anywhere.

      As you say, they must all live in ugly shitholes.

    2. blackworx
      Boffin

      Perhaps you should get some perspective

      Can't really see how what manner of boxes telcos choose to install would improve civic beauty in any sufficiently decent-looking suburb, since they're all so crowded with cars and 8 foot high 4x4s that you can't see the bloody street anyway. If you want to nominate something offensive and pointless to get rid of which will pretty this country up a bit, try the all-pervasive motor car instead of some inoffensive green boxes that actually provide a service rather than choke the place up.

      1. James Thomas

        I agree completely

        But it should still be up to the people who actually live there to decide rather than BT.

        Incidentally I know the road this concerns and it's actually not that pretty to begin with, but the principle still holds :)

  15. Jerome 2
    Stop

    F*ck em

    'F*ck em' was my immediate thought and it's nice to see there are a couple of other high brow thinkers of the same mind.

  16. ben 29
    Unhappy

    40% of properties

    Well that accounts for all the major population centres, and the rest of the country can whistle... as we currently do for Cable, LLU etc. etc. etc.

    Forgive me, BT, if I am not overflowing with excitement at the prospect of FTTC - especially as I will be paying for it through my land line tax (thank's so much Darling) as well as line rental and definitely not reaping any benefit.

  17. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Tzael's got it

    I think Tzael has got the best idea. Leave it in the ground. When the BT engineer requires access, they press a button, the lid opens and it rises out of the ground. Very futuristic. Also, might help scupper some of the vandals.

    1. Alan Firminger

      Two problems in a hole

      The hole will fill with water

      The lift will fail so the box, hand wound up, is left above ground

      1. Brutus

        huh

        So put a drainage hole in the exterior hoist housing and make the electronics cabinet water-tight. Not exactly difficult.

        While you're about it, make the lifting mechanism hydraulic/compressed-air operated using a compressor on board the service vehicle to prevent the local scrotes from opening the thing and nicking the insides.

        1. David Barrett

          Water tight?

          Pretty sure that box is going to need some cooling... How exactly are they getting that lovely hot air out of their buried water tight box?

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Grenade

    Moan moan moan

    They should be thankful they've got a f**king working telephone line, f**k what the cabinets looks like. I'd be tempted to suggest BT just blow up the exchange and let them have f**k all ... give them two cups and a bit of string and see how broadband you get out that!!

  19. Marvin the Martian
    Stop

    I fully support Balefire's proposal

    Why do they paint them green anyway? To blend in? So you can walk into them?

    Along Balefire's lines, I'd modify it to cow- or hippopotamus shaped,* and just let local artists paint them as they like. As was uselessly done by the Cow Parade people. Or assorted animals, totems and food objects --- will help a lot of people, from misplaced tourists to small children. "You go right at the icecream, until you see the penguin, then bend left to where you see the unicorn, and ask again," and the bobby can help the crying infant that knows she lives close to the carrot.

    *cables to be routed through legs, hence possibly second preferable.

    1. David S
      Thumb Up

      Genius

      Holy shitsticks, Marvin. That's blummin inspired! Street furniture as street art? Genius!

      I especially like the mental (both senses) image of the sobbing kid with the balloon looking for a giant carrot. Carroll would be proud.

  20. TRT

    High stuff near roads

    Well, a fence within a metre of a public roadway needs planning permission over 1m height because of visibility issues for road users. So (1) these boxes will no doubt be bigger than some people's garden walls and (2) they will add various blind spots to the roads. Well thought out there, BT. Why not put them underground or make them low and long?

    1. Rattus Rattus

      If there's anything in the world

      lower and longer than me, I want it caught and shot. I have a reputation to uphold you know.

      In all seriousness, though, can you imagine a repair engineer crawling along on his hands and knees alongside one trying to find the bit he has to fix? It would be a bugger to work on.

  21. Anonymous Coward
    WTF?

    Priorities

    Perhaps staff at Haringey Council should spend their time looking after the child services division instead of worrying about the size of BT's street boxes.

    If I was the BT person liaising with the Council I would have told them to fuck off and make sure they didn't let anymore baby killers slip through the net.

    This is a disgraceful waste of council time and money when they have higher priorities.

  22. blackworx
    Badgers

    Council probably couldn't have cared less

    Sounds to me like that Haringey Council woman is basically making a bit of noise for the benefit of the granola munchers. Wouldn't surprise me if the council and BT already had it all tied up behind the scenes before the NIMBYs* started jumping up and down about it. Fits with the BT statement anyway, which itself reads like a roll of the eyes.

    We've been able to hear the loud transformer buzz coming from some frankly enormous ADSL2 cabinets at the end of our street for the last year or so, but sadly we don't live in a conservation area (nor is our street populated by self righteous tits) so nothing gets done about it, despite the fact they block more than half the pavement. I really feel sorry for the folk whose house they back on to; must be like sleeping next to a diesel generator.

    * How do you pluralise NIMBY? Is it NIMBYs? NIMBies? NIMBYies? Oh no hang on I've got it... Twats.

  23. P.Nutt
    Alert

    FFS

    Do these muppets want faster internet or not. I am sure 99.99% of the country would kill to be on a trial like they are. If they would like to swap cabinets with me I would be more than happy to oblige.

    1. JimC
      WTF?

      want faster internet 0r not?

      > I am sure that 99.99% of the country would kill to be on a trial

      I rather suspect that a majority of the actual population of the country doesn't give a damn about faster broadband. Latest stat I can immediately spot suggests that only about 65% of the country has broadband at all, so all the occupants of the remaining 35% of households obviously won't care. Then what percentage of the remaining really want faster broadband? All those under 5 won't care, all those who just use the net for email and some web browsing probably don't care - I certainly don't... I reckon that's going to be easily half the population of the remaining households...

  24. Simon 6
    Paris Hilton

    erm...so...

    If "Up to 20Megs!" is quite often found to be 1 Meg does "Up to 40 Megs" mean we can expect speeds of around 2Mb and we may be able to watch iPlayer with buffering happening every few minutes instead of every few seconds?

    Paris because she could deliver anything she wanted to me.

  25. Kevin Reader
    Thumb Up

    There are some pictures across the web:

    ThinkBroadband covered this a while ago:

    http://www.thinkbroadband.com/news/4011-aaisp-connects-first-business-on-bt-fibre-to-the-cabinet-pilot.html

    Some people that work on it:

    http://modular-solution.com/2009/03/27/next-generation-broadband-fttc/

    And here's something similar by Rutland Telecom - who's name sadly for them made me immediately think of an ISP subsidiary of "Rutland Weekend Television". They appear to be providing "Fibre to the Countryside". There box actually seems neater than BT's own solution.

    http://www.rutlandtelecom.co.uk/lyddington/

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Thumb Down

      Bloody title

      And how exactly from those pictures are you able to tell the cab is 1.6m high

  26. unitron

    Solution: Fewer, bigger boxes

    Replace them with replicas of those big blue police call boxes with locks that can only be opened with a sonic screwdriver.

    And put a sound system inside just so you can play a certain well known sound effect every once in a while.

    1. Mark 110

      Points

      A couple of points here relating to my experience working 10 years for Telewest / Virgin Media.

      Black paint: Yeah that will keep things cool. Come midsummer everyones broadband will die on a hot day.

      Underground boxes: Susceptible to all kinds of issues water being the least of them. Flooded boxes keep working its just servicing thats an issue. All the kit including power supplies used in subpavement kit is water resistant its just a bitch to service a bx thats flooded. To all those saying make it water tight - its not as easy as all that. Even if you make it water tight on day 1 it won't be after 10 years of subsidence, traffic vibrations, roadworks, etc. Also you want it to be relatively cheap to install or the service you're offering becomes uncompetitive.

      The biggest issue with underground boxes in my experience is vermin. Try getting a problem fixed when theres 50 rats cuddled up to the nice warm power unit . . . with all your nice neat cabling chewed up and used as nesting material . . . .

  27. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    Whut...

    Make em out of tofu and organic tibetan mountain goat pubes. (I think it's a Hugh Fairly Witless recipe)

    Paris, she could have my organics.

  28. gr0mit

    Send the green boxes to Basingstoke then!

    Well, please just send the boxes that Muswell hill doesn't want down to Basingstoke, where we have a paltry 77 cabinets planned for FTTC, rather than blanket coverage. I am about a quarter of a mile away from the covered area, which has left a lot of us fuming at BT.

    http://www.jasonrivers.co.uk/2009/12/01/basingstoke-fttc-trial/ is another person who's ranting about this. Come on BT!

    Best regards

    Tim Robinson

    www.txrxcomms.co.uk

  29. Aristotles slow and dimwitted horse
    FAIL

    Phorm et al

    Seems to be becoming a theme with BT in regards to failing to get proper approvals for trials of services...

  30. Rob Beard
    FAIL

    Ungrateful sods

    I think BT should take the cabinets out and give some more deserving areas access to faster broadband (I'm sure sticking a cabinet like these inbetween some of those longer lines might help some folks actually get some broadband rather than no broadband).

    Rob (who counts his lucky stars he can get a reasonable-ish broadband connection)

  31. Bl33ter
    Badgers

    Box?

    Hang on, someone in London is complaining about a green box on their street? Now I've been to London, there's f*cking houses everywhere and people are complaining about a 1.6m high green box on their street!! You'd think that years of seeing nothing but buildings out there bleeding windows and navigating round dog turds would have trained them to ignore the odd green box here and there.

  32. HaplessPoet

    Hard to Believe

    I can't imagine they got a very good view of the "boxes" from the seat of a RangeRover, pulling in or out of ones drive at 40mph!

    We need a WGAS Icon, because I certainly don't"

  33. Z80
    Paris Hilton

    40meg?

    Can someone who knows more about this/can be arsed to look it up tell me what sort of kit you'll need in your house to get 40Mbit on FTTC? ADSL2+ tops out at 24Mbit?

    Cheers

    1. Gerhard Mack
      Boffin

      @Z80

      It's probably VDSL2. 40 Mbps sounds right about where the maximum should be for 1 block of voice rated copper wire between devices.

  34. Dylan Fahey
    FAIL

    Pull out the boxes

    Pull out the boxes and DO NOT replace them with anything. One thing that technology does not do, is KISS RICH ASS.

  35. Anonymous Coward
    FAIL

    These boxes are pretty huge

    I live in this area and have actually seen these boxes. They are somewhat unsubtle.

    Queens Avenue (and the surrounding roads) are mostly turn of the century houses backing on to Alexandra Palace and park. There are (possibly surprisingly) very few 4x4s here, and in general it is quite a pretty area. These boxes are like having a tall, green fat bloke permanently parked on the street corner, while I do understand the need for extra space (having seen the inside of a normal cabinet) BT could have at least tried a bit harder to blend them in a bit.

  36. AndrueC Silver badge
    Thumb Up

    It's their street...

    ..so they can cry if they want to.

    Everyone has the right to complain about changes to street furniture in their area. The fact it's a conservation area makes that even more valid. It's also nice to hear of a council that actually listens to its residents and acts on their complaint.

    Our council dumped a kid's playground on us despite our complaints and warnings that there was no suitable parking. So now we put up with dangerous parking from lazy parents who think that walking an extra ten metres is just too difficult for their offspring and at night we get to hear their older siblings f'ing and blinding at each other.

    So yeah - more power to the residents.

  37. the_leander
    Grenade

    Yank the Cabinets

    And supply them with a internet service more in keeping with the old fashioned buildings.

    Let them suck dialup.

  38. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    Disguise them better ...

    ... perhaps as mobile phone towers? Or people in wheelchairs - everyone looks the other way when walking past 'wheelies'.

    - Paris, because, she's proud to show off her box, and rarely gets asked to disguise it....

    1. Chris Bradshaw

      Ah, yes, but

      Paris's box isn't 1.6 m tall, and (last I saw it anyway) isn't green...

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Paris Hilton

        Actually...

        given that a lot of One Night in Paris was filmed in false-colour night vision, the video evidence suggests that Paris' box IS green!

        And she's only about 1.7m tall, so it's close enough to Paris sized and Paris coloured!

  39. John Sturdy
    FAIL

    Size matters

    How come everyone else has been miniaturizing technology for decades, and BT is going to larger boxes? What's in them, ENIACs?

  40. Edster

    Is there anyone BT can't upset ?

    Maybe they should have run the trial in Hambleden...

  41. Simon B
    Grenade

    Leave them in the dark ages ffs

    Fuck London, leave them with dated equipment and give the modern faster stuff to the rest of the country that is more grateful and not so fucking stuck up.

  42. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    Send them to Aberdeen!

    We'd be grateful, and as the oil price is going up we'd be able to pay for the premium services too!

    Also, could I suggest to BT that- if the boxes can't be redesigned to lower their volume- the boxes are re purposed to become streetlight bases (giving a large chimney-like structure (lowering the heating loads and with a pretty big internal volume) as well as providing a BT-owned pole for any Wireless rollouts/snooping they decide to do in future) or just bent round a corner? I doubt anyone would object as much to a lower, wider box going round a corner- and if they were made to look like they were made from cast iron it'd fit in better with a protected-age neighbourhood.

    Saying that, BT really need to be fined into the ground for their constant refusal to follow rules on privacy, planning and... well, the rest of their operations.

  43. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    Ungrateful bastards.

    Send those cabinets over here please!

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