The Sea to Sky Highway (STSH) from Vancouver, B.C. to the world famous Whistler-Blackcomb ski resort is one of the grandest passages on the planet. And up until recently, it ranked as one of the most dangerous stretches of highway in Canada.
As part of Vancouver’s 2010 Winter Olympics bid, British Columbia authorized a $500 million upgrade to the highway to facilitate the transport of millions of Olympic enthusiasts and enhance its safety.
The challenge was how to provide quick, cost-effective connectivity for a variety of voice and data requirements – including PBX voice trunks, two-way radios, Ethernet, high-speed Internet access, fax, and modem stations. This variety of services had to serve more than 800 employees working in the field, the main office, and the five satellite offices located along this 62-mile (100 km) mountainous highway. There was very little existing communications infrastructure.
“Even in the few places along the STSH where there was fiber, we ran into the 'Last Mile' problem, making it inordinately expensive to connect our five satellite offices,” says Troy Van Bostelen, a manager for Peter Kiewit Sons (PKS), the general contractor for the STSH project. “At some point, we clicked on the idea of a single high-speed, wireless pipe that could transport all of our data, radio, phone, and high-speed Internet traffic among the offices and in the field.”
Working with its systems integrator, Sea to Sky Wireless Inc., PKS selected Vmux voice trunking pseudowire gateways and the Airmux-200 wireless broadband multiplexer from RAD Data Communications. The Vmux provides 16:1 voice compression and integrates voice, data, and LAN traffic for delivery over packet networks. The Airmux-200 provides a single wireless “pipe” for the high-speed transmission of these services.