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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Ambitious plans revealed for Wales' own broadband company

One year since it began its £200m full-fibre rollout, Ogi is now opening four new offices across South Wales

Ogi, the Welsh broadband company, is opening four new offices in South Wales this month

Wales' own broadband company is opening new offices this month, one year since it rebranded and launched its £200m full-fibre rollout.

Ogi will be opening four offices over the next two weeks with premises in St Clears and Tongwynlais, a network laboratory in Newport and a new headquarters in Cardiff's Hodge House.

The firm said it is recruiting on average two people per week, having grown from 21 staff this time last year to more than 136 today, with around five more members of staff joining this month.

Chief executive Ben Allwright said: "Right from the start, our ambition has been to become a leading Welsh telecoms company, and the last 12 months have certainly laid the foundations for that goal.

"We’re continuously driven to bring next generation broadband to underserved areas across Wales. Ogi’s roll-out is bringing much needed connectivity to towns and villages from Pembrokeshire to Monmouthshire much faster than they’d otherwise be served, ensuring everybody has access to the same opportunities for a more prosperous and greener future."

He added: "Our team live and work in our rollout communities and are passionate about the possibilities that Gigabit-connectivity is bringing."

The company has grown rapidly since it launched its new brand, Ogi, in June last year, following an investment from European infrastructure funders Infracapital to deliver a £200m phase one business plan.