I am well aware the situation in my case is not unique. Only 59% of City of London have access just for FTTC. So the percentage for FTTP is even smaller. This wayleave issue that we talk about is not just a problem with my building management, but it is certainly a common issue amongst most buildings around the city and central London.
I've been observing last few years the Hyperoptic map https://hyperoptic.com/map/?residential
Mostly the entire City of London area has grey marks for the buildings where permissions have yet to be granted.
What I am going to do as suggested by others is to wait and see how FTTC performs when it becomes available soon. If it is not to satisfaction then I'll try and organise with the residents of my building and meet the team to discuss with them about why FTTP is important. I guess meeting with 3-5 other residents might be more helpful than me trying to fight alone speaking to the authority. Because it's easier for the management team to ignore me when I am the only one approaching them asking for Fibre.
I don't think I'd want to move elsewhere because that's only going to let the management team off the hook and relief them. They need to be put under pressure & me leaving will only make them happy. And considering all the other major positives I have where I live moving elsewhere just for Full Fibre may not be rational.
So far my openreach checker hasn't updated. Slightly annoying but what can you do!I guess that cabinet in Hanbury Street that you posted a few weeks ago will not serve you, but will serve me instead. It is probably a capacity issue. You'll probably have to wait for another cabinet or hope that you'll get FTTP instead. Since my building has 82 flats I'd think that the cabinet will have to be prioritised for the entire building and may not have enough capacity for others that's why.



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