Vale of Glamorgan, get ready for full fibre broadband
We’re Ogi. Wales’s home-grown broadband company, here to power-up communities like Dinas Powys, Llantwit Major, Rhoose and St Athan with our ultrafast full fibre broadband. It’s next generation stuff, ready to keep you working, entertained and connected in your community. Starting at 150Mbps download, Ogi’s service is ultrafast and ultra-reliable.
The full fibre advantage
We’re bringing fibre power right to the door – bypassing those little connections and installing a brand new broadband network ready for all the streaming you could ever wish for, today and well into the future.
Building a full fibre network takes a lot of planning, some digging and sometimes a little disruption. But don’t worry, if we need to work in your street, it should only take a few weeks and, once it’s in, your full fibre network is capable of being up-cycled continually, so you won’t be seeing our diggers again for a very long time (unless we need to quickly repair something, of course).
Community is at the heart of all we do
Our connection goes way beyond broadband. We want to root ourselves among the people and communities we serve. We do this by employing people locally, investing around £5million in each town we bring full fibre connectivity to and supporting local groups, from sports clubs and coffee mornings to radio stations and everything in-between.
Meet Louise, your Community Liaison Officer
When Louise isn’t enjoying a cuppa and a chat about all things Ogi in a local coffee shop, she can be found out in the great outdoors. You will mostly find her out on the water paddle-boarding, or braving the cold water wild swimming in the sea or local lake. On dry land Louise explores Wales on two feet, walking and hiking on a regular basis.
As unique as they come…
DYK: the Vale of Glamorgan covers 33,097 hectares (130 square miles) and has 53 km (33 mi) of coastline. The yellow-grey cliffs on the Glamorgan Heritage Coast (which stretches between Gileston and Ogmore-by-Sea) are unique on the Celtic Sea coastline (i.e. Cornwall, Wales, Ireland and Brittany) as they are formed of a combination of liassic limestone, shale and carboniferous sandstone/limestone.
It’s amazing what you can find on the internet, right? *Source: Glamorgan Archives