St. Lawrence
- 1,200 Miles
- $48M Investment
Project Overview
Project Route Map
Community Benefits
Transformative Connectivity
Upward Mobility
Essential Services
Economic Uplift
Funding Structure
Federal Grants (NTIA Middle Mile & BEAD)
$47M
State of Alaska Funding
Need info
Private Investment (Quintillion)
Need info
Total Project Investment
$48M
Project Timeline
Feasibility & Engineering — Completed
Funding Determination — In Progress
Full Construction Mobilization — Pending Award
Community Deployment & Activation — To Be Announced
Technical Specifications
Network Infrastructure
Architecture:
Fiber-to-the-Home (FTTH)
Backhaul:
Integrated with Quintillion’s subsea–terrestrial network
Environmental Design:
Engineered for extreme Arctic conditions
Resilience Features
Burial Depth:
2-3 meters subsea
Armoring:
Double armor in shore zones
Redundancy:
Ring architecture
Monitoring:
24/7 NOC surveillance
The St. Lawrence Island Project delivers a full fiber-to-the-home architecture engineered for one of Alaska’s harshest environments. Early funding has already supported feasibility work, engineering design, permitting plans, and procurement of two Arctic-hardened telecom shelters essential for remote deployment.
Once fully built, the system will integrate into Quintillion’s subsea–terrestrial backbone, enabling bandwidth far surpassing current 1–5 Mbps service. The infrastructure strengthens aviation, weather, emergency, and public safety operations while supporting long-term scalability, environmental monitoring capabilities, and future community growth.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which communities will receive service?
The project serves Gambell and Savoonga, two of Alaska’s most remote and underserved communities, both of which currently lack reliable high-capacity broadband infrastructure.