Meet Intersection, the Google-funded startup that will blanket your city in superfast, free Wi-Fi

Deblasio LinkNYC
Deblasio LinkNYC

(Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office)

For a few months now, New Yorkers lucky enough to be in specific parts of the city have enjoyed superfast, free Wi-Fi.

But the hotspots are spreading fast, and could soon migrate to other cities.

That's the audacious plan of Intersection, the company that administers LinkNYC.

Intersection CEO Al Kelly says LinkNYC — named after the monolith-like devices now dotting Manhattan streets — are signing up 15,000 new users a week, and there have been over 2 million individual sessions since the first four Links were turned on in January.

And that's with only a limited number of Links installed on city streets so far. The rate of usage is "quite frankly mind-boggling given how we're so early — we have 200 units versus 7,500 we want to deploy," Kelly said.

By the end of the year, Intersection will have nearly 500 Links installed in all five city boroughs. The first Links go up in the Bronx in a couple of weeks. "Obviously as we scale up is when this gets much more exciting than it is today," Kelly said.

Eventually, the idea is that someone could walk up or down a street and stay connected to the public Wi-Fi network the entire time. For some New Yorkers, Links could be their main broadband-internet connection, Kelly says. Soon, the technology could spread to other cities.

Link has a long way to go to get to that point, but they've got the support of a very powerful backer: Alphabet, the nearly $500 billion parent company of Google.

Friends in high places

although links are supposed to be available on all street corners between 13th and 19th street this was the stand in on the 19th street corner undeterred we kept looking
although links are supposed to be available on all street corners between 13th and 19th street this was the stand in on the 19th street corner undeterred we kept looking

(Brandt Ranj)

When walking through the door at Intersection's Midtown Manhattan offices, you're greeted by a big sign saying "Sidewalk Labs."

That's so people know there are actually two companies in the office, the Intersection receptionist tells me.

When Google restructured itself into Alphabet last summer, it also created Sidewalk Labs, an independent subsidiary led by CEO Dan Doctoroff and dedicated to urban technology.

One of Sidewalk's first moves was to fund Titan Outdoor, a private advertising company, and Control Group, a technology company, and help merge the two into Intersection.

The reason they were chosen was because the two companies had formed a coalition and won the New York City contract to put Links in the city. When you visit Intersection's website, the top image is a photo of a Link on the street.

To cities, Links should be inexpensive or free to install thanks to the two digital-advertising spaces on both side, and the system should eventually pay for itself. In fact, New York expects to pull revenue from the Links, and isn't contributing any taxpayer money to the project.