As of May 2026, Bellflower Connect, a public-private municipal network in California, has connected 60 households through solar-powered micro-servers running Intel Xeon processors at the edge. Qualifying low-income residents receive free internet access, while other households can subscribe for $15 per month and businesses for $39 per month, significantly below traditional telecom rates. The project uses local edge computing instead of distant cloud data centers, reducing power consumption and infrastructure costs. By mid-2027, organizers expect 10,000 households to be connected, with free Wi-Fi covering parks, libraries, and outdoor markets.
The expansion blueprint is already advancing to other U.S. cities. Wrightsville, Arkansas will begin Phase 1 installation this summer, with eight additional cities in the design and approval pipeline. Tradewinds Networks, the project partner, plans to scale the model to 50 cities under 150,000 people over the next few years.