H-Mart Grocery store specializes in Korean foods and draws shoppers from around the Lower Mainland. But the stage for the new face of Coquitlam – the one with the gleaming highrises and enviable business potential – was set 15 years ago, when its engineers and city council decided to lay fibre optic cable throughout the municipality in order to update the traffic-light system. “Fibre optic cable wasn’t mandatory, but the council foresaw the day when traffic cameras would become commonplace,” says Rick Adams, Coquitlam’s manager of information and communications technology. Today, the cable comprises an infrastructure network – the only one of its kind in any Canadian municipality – that will soon enable the movement of telecom services. In short, the new public works of the 21st century. “We had the luck of timing on our side with that initiative,” says Stewart. “With this infrastructure in place, we’ll soon be able to provide users of homebased businesses, stay-at-home workers and anyone else with enormous and inexpensive Internet throughput. This new public utility will be a huge magnet for traditional businesses and new residents alike.” Under its brand name of QNet, the fibre optic network has been likened Commercial HVAC • Industrial Ventilation • Specialty Manufacturing • Laboratories Pharmaceutical • Clean Rooms • Environmental Rooms • Recreational Facilities INTEGRITY • QUALITY • PROFESSIONALISM Congratulations City of Coquitlam on this very exciting facility 1578 Hartley Avenue, Coquitlam, B.C. V3K 7A1 • Tel (604) 540-4632 • Fax (604) 540-4674 Promotional Feature city of coquitlam Coquitlam City Centre as Westwood Plateau rises to Eagle Mountain, with Mount Seymour in the distance. city of coquitlam QNET – TRANSMITTING LARGE AMOUNTS OF INFORMATION AT THE SPEED Rick Adams, Coquitlam’s manager of information and communications technology, enjoys pointing out that “We’re the first city in North America to lease our unused (dark) carrier-grade fibre to telecom service providers, which helps them extend their footprint in the community and meet the escalating demand for bandwidth.” The carrier-grade infrastructure is part of Coquitlam’s 50-kilometre fibre optic network originally installed for traffic signal coordination. It took the vision of Coquitlam’s city council to turn it into a money-making telecommunications conduit, and it did so by creating QNet, a self-sustaining and whollyowned municipal corporation. Coquitlam doesn’t have a substantial high-tech or commercial business sector that would compel large telecom service providers to do business in the city. However, many such providers are running their fibre optic networks through Coquitlam, and thanks to QNet they can easily tie into its network. Smaller providers Promotional Feature who view Coquitlam as an attractive market are also helping to bring national carriers onboard as their backhaul partners. QNet installs fibre optic connections directly into businesses and residential complexes after entering into agreements with providers. As long as the value of the lease over its term ensures cost recovery for the “last yard” connection (as connections to facilities are called), QNet covers all the costs of bringing fibre optics into premises. How feasible is QNet as a business? Adams points out that when the City of Coquitlam used the fibre optic network to connect all of its civic buildings in 2003, “this resulted in an annual savings of $300,000 in networking costs.” He adds that “we aim for QNet to be profitable by 2013, by which point many home-based businesses and virtual workplaces will be located here.” The first of two permanent co-location facilities is situated in Coquitlam’s new Sports Centre. In addition to the centre being a major hub for the fibre optic network, QNet is using the heat from its telecom equipment to keep the building foundation under the ice surface from freezing. Quality assurance is a key element of the QNet business plan. Professional telecom carriers expect the same standards of quality and responsiveness that they provide to their customers,” says Roel Coert, director of QNet operations. “Our network is fully supported on a 24/7 basis and our two telecom co-location facilities are built to the latest standards for energy efficiency and disaster survivability.” Adams points out that in Asia and Europe, “communities treat telecommunications technology as a publicly-owned entity, and we’ve put ourselves in the position to do that here. Our goals are job creation, a better quality of life, getting people off the roads by allowing them to work at home, and creating a competitive telecom environment.” Given QNet’s advantages, these goals stand a fair chance of being met. QNet: OF LIGHT • Makes it easy for any telecom service provider in the country to connect to Coquitlam consumers, thereby enhancing choices for business and residential consumers. • Supports a broad range of economic development strategies, including health, research, education, high-tech, home-based business and virtual workplace. • Helps ensure Coquitlam stays at the forefront of new and emerging applications, such as virtual classroom and telemedicine. • Offers the most competitive, flat-rate, dark fibre optic lease pricing in the country. Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart views QNet as “all about taking an investment we needed for City services and using the unused capacity to address the growing need for high speed internet access in our community. “The rate structure and leasing arrangements are open to all telecom service providers, and our goal is to provide the infrastructure so that they can extend and improve services to the advantage of businesses here.” n to a road network that enables goods and services to move through the community (see sidebar). The comparison is apt, since Coquitlam’s fortunes have historically hinged on transportation networks of various forms: the opening of the Lougheed Highway in 1953 made the city more accessible and set the stage for residential growth. That’s why city planners are excited about the Port Mann Bridge twinning project and smaller, but no less important, civil undertakings such as the King Edward overpass. “These projects will, apart from alleviating traffic jams, make Coquitlam even more accessible and will distance ourselves further from our outdated image as a bedroom community,” says Wayne Beggs, Coquitlam’s manager of economic development. “The upgrades will also improve access to important hubs within our city, such as the industrial area of United Boulevard.” Thoroughfares are not the only things to be revitalized in Coquitlam. About 10 per cent of the waterfront region near the Port Mann Bridge where the now-defunct Fraser Mills is located has been earmarked as a mixed-use community, and the City has collaborated with The Beedie Group to finetune a 15-year plan to maximize use of the area. “Within five years we’ll see residences, commercial space, some retail and lots of Urban Systems.indd 1 8/24/10 2:50:25 PM Promotional Feature CTJ Contracting Ltd. 2026 Winter Crescent Coquitlam BC V3K 6T6 Contact: Mike Turner 604-309-8681 Fax: 604-931-2282 email: [email protected] CTJ Contracting.indd 1 CTJ Contracting Ltd. is proud to be a part of the team on the Coquitlam Town Centre Fire Hall addition. CTJ Contracting Ltd. provides concrete forming services for Commercial, Industrial and Multiresidential construction. 8/3/10 3:53:08 PM 2876 Norland Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5B 3A6 Phone: 604-294-4140 Fax: 604-294-4142 www.palmieribrospaving.ca Street Work | Parking Lots Driveways | Concrete Curbs Patching | Civil Works Palmieri Bros.indd 1 8/4/10 9:50:22 AM Girl time. Your Shopping Destination! Find what you’re shopping for at Coquitlam Centre. Featuring more than 200 stores and services, including H&M, Aritzia, Guess?, Jacob, Tristan, Jack & Jill, lululemon athletica and Sephora. Barnet and Lougheed Hwy l 604.464.1414 l coquitlamcentre.com city of coquitlam The seven-acre Colony Farms Community Gardens is entirely organic and offers Coquitlam citizens with an opportunity to get out and garden. detect gas leaks, water leaks, or seismic vibrations), is a Coquitlam-based entrepreneur who always knew his city would eventually come into the limelight. “It’s too good a place to ignore,” he says. “I’ve lived in and operated my business here for 20 years and can’t imagine being anywhere else. Coquitlam is centrally located within Metro Vancouver, it has all of the facilities and amenities of a big city without the expense, it’s business friendly, and in terms of living here, it’s nice and peaceful.” The core of any successful city is its people, and on that score Coquitlam devotes an unusual amount of time and energy supporting its various institutes of learning and international transfer programs. “Our school system has more foreign students per capita than anywhere else in B.C., and with 2,000 students from Spain, Iran, Korea, China and other countries enrolled in our Coquitlam School District, this makes us bigger than the City of Toronto’s foreign student program,” says Stewart. “Not only does this enhance our culture and community, it’s a boon to our economy, and frequently the families of these students come here to live or establish businesses.” As for institutes of higher learning, the 4,000-student David Lam Campus of Douglas College offers university transfer, career-training and academic-upgrading programs. Although Stewart stresses that the development of Coquitlam’s city centre and other beneficial components is still ongoing, he takes a moment to consider the thriving community around him. “We’ve come a long way” he concedes. “All I can say in addition to that is ‘Stay tuned’: if you think this is an amazing place in which to live, work and play now, it’ll be even more so in the future.” n This promotional feature was prepared by BCBusiness magazine’s Special Advertising Features Dept. Writer: Robin Brunet. For information, contact VP of corporate features John Cochrane at 604-299-7311. Email: [email protected] Promotional Features If you would like your company featured in a BCBusiness magazine Promotional Feature please contact: John Cochrane Tel: 604.299.7311 [email protected] Promotional Feature
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