North, East,
West and South
Here’s a birds eye view of what’s hot and what’s not, in the superfast tech-driven people friendly world of Broadway Broadband!
Major step forward for flagship broadband project
A major step forward has been taken in a flagship broadband project in Pembrokeshire that aims to transform the digital landscape in the county. The
Broadway Partners target 500,000 premises for FTTP Broadband
Rural operator Broadway Partners has today announced that they will aim to roll-out their “gigabit-capable … fibre” network to cover 500,000 UK homes and businesses by the
Monmouthshire Village Gets Ultrafast Broadband Boost
Sixty homes in the Monmouthshire village of Llanddewi Rhydderch can now have Full Fibre to the Premise (FTTP), able to receive Ultrafast Broadband, with a
‘Cut off’ remote Scottish village is now a thousand times better off!
After being told they would have to pay tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of pounds to get decent broadband speeds, the long-suffering residents of
We’re winners………
Broadway Partners has won the “Most Viable 5G Use Case” award at the 5G Realised conference in London – for our deployment of 60GHz mesh
Gigabit Broadband Comes to the ‘Forgotten’ Village of Llanddewi Rhydderch
A number of homes in the rural Monmouthshire village of Llanddewi Rhydderch are for the first time benefiting from Gigabit broadband as part of an
Broadway Partners takes home the INCA Technical Innovation Award
It was all smiles from our CEO Michael Armitage when Broadway Partners scooped the award for Technical Innovation at the inaugural INCA awards in London
Five ISPs Express Interest in Delivering 10Mbps UK Broadband USO
Ofcom has revealed that only BT(Openreach), KCOM, Hyperoptic, Quickline and Broadway Partners have expressed a formal interest in becoming suppliers for the new Universal Service Obligation (USO), which from
Advertised broadband speeds ‘lowered by 41%’ following ASA ruling
Following recent changes to advertising rules the majority of broadband providers have been forced to cut the headline speeds they advertise, according to research by