|

With one of the world's largest Internet backbones,
Level 3's customers include 8 of the 10 largest U.S. ISPs and 8 of the
10 largest European telecom carriers.
Level 3 Communications, Inc. was
founded in 1985 as Kiewit Diversified Group (KDG), a wholly owned subsidiary
of the 114-year old construction, mining, information services and communications
company Peter Kiewit Sons.
In 1998, KDG changed its name to Level 3 Communications, Inc. and became
an independent corporation. On April 1st of that year, Level 3 started
trading on the NASDAQ as LVLT.
Level 3 has spent the past few years on something of a buying spreethe
company acquired the assets of Genuity
in 2003, and bought both Sprint's
wholesale dialup business and ICG's
wholesale dialup business in 2004. In 2005, the company acquired WilTel,
and in 2006 it bought ICG
and Progress Telecom, as well as TelCove,
Looking
Glass Networks, and Broadwing.
Level
3's network now spans more than 47,000 intercity route miles, and
reaches customers in major markets throughout the United States and Europe.
The network serves a wide range of clients including inter-exchange carriers,
local phone companies, European PTTs, cable operators, ISPs, wireless
companies, content providers, and media and entertainment companies.
The network
serves 230 on-net markets200 in the U.S. and 30 in Europe. It also
delivers softswitch platform coverage to more than 93 percent of the U.S.
population, and voice services to rate centers serving more than 80 percent
of U.S. households.
Level 3 also operates 78
data centers across the U.S. and Europe with the following design
features:
- Multi-layer security control procedures, biometric readers, and 24/7
video and alarm monitoring;
- Uninterruptible redundant AC and DC power solutions that are flexible
and upgradeable;
- HVAC-redundant design with air distribution under raised flooring;
- Smoke detection systems above and below raised flooring;
- Double-interlock, pre-action, dry-pipe fire suppression;
- Overhead cable management and ladder racking to provide easy access
to all cabling
The company's North American network is linked to Europe via Yellow,
a transatlantic
cable system built by Level 3 and activated in November of 2000. Yellow
covers a distance of almost 4,000 miles, linking the town of Bude in the
United Kingdom to Long Island, New York. The cable's capacity is currently
320 Gbps, but is upgradeable to 640 Gbps. Level 3 also has capacity on
AC-1, the Apollo North and the Apollo South cables.
In April of 2000, the Smithsonian Institution cited Level 3 as a Computerworld
Smithsonian Laureate, calling it "the world's first upgradeable international
fiber optic network to be completely optimized for Internet Protocol technology…
helping to stimulate the biggest change in communications technology in
100 years." A case study of the network is now archived in the Smithsonian's
permanent research collection.
Network statistics:
- more than 47,000 intercity route miles
- more than 25,000 metropolitan route miles
- more than 230 on-net markets
- more than 1,700,000 miles of metro fiber
:
Corporate Contact Info:
Related articles |
| |
[Oct. 7, 2005] |
The Cogent-Level 3 Dispute |
| |
[Feb. 3, 2005] |
WTS online files with the FCC |
| |
[April 5, 2004] |
Level
3: Dialup Not Dead |
| |
[May 15, 2003] |
Level
3 Tees Up VoIP Launch |
| |
[Jan. 16, 2003] |
Wholesale Dialup Directory:
Level 3 Communications |
| |
[Nov. 29, 2002] |
Level 3 Picks Up Genuity |
| |
[July 25, 2002] |
Level 3 Makes Play for Williams |
| |
[July 9, 2002] |
Level 3 Up, Qwest Down |
| |
[Dec. 26, 2001] |
Level 3 Moves Closer to AOL |
| |
[Dec. 10, 2001] |
Level 3 To Acquire McLeodUSA Dial-Up Assets |
| |
[Dec. 5, 2001] |
Level 3 to Expand European Network |
| |
[Nov. 28, 2000] |
Level
3 Nets $700 Million In Dark Fiber Contracts |
| |
[July 20, 2000] |
Level 3 Completes Flordia Network Ring |
| |
|
|