They carry power, communications and entertainment into our homes and businesses. Take a closer look and you will notice they also physically carry a large amount of equipment—complicated-looking metal objects of different shapes and sizes.
Those assets are the reason joint use, the sharing of infrastructure asset investments like utility poles and underground conduit between multiple parties for the greater good of the consumer, exists.
Years ago, utility poles primarily carried power and phone lines. Our entertainment options mostly rode the airwaves to your television set, and the internet was just a gleam in an MIT professor's eye. Post 1978, however, cable companies, internet providers, and wireless and WiFi companies blossomed and vied to reach customers further and further afield. Rather than allow anyone with a signal to send to erect their own poles, joint use became an invaluable concept. Essentially the sharing of space on utility poles by a myriad of businesses, it kept our skies from becoming cluttered crisscrosses of wire and pole structures. But in its wake, new relationship rules had to be conceived.
When several entities share the same pole (attachers), each one must be able to coordinate their activities with adjacent attachers and pole owners to make sure regulatory, safety and contractual requirements are met. It amounts to sharing with structure—oversight and protocol for partnerships that have to go smoothly in order for the nation to enjoy its premium cable channels, long-distance phone calls and streaming video.
In a nutshell, well-executed asset sharing means order in what is potentially a world of chaos. Without the processes, communication and collaboration that joint use enforces, a lot could happen:
Curious about joint use and want to know more? Download our infrastructure asset management primer, Joint Use Asset Management: The Basics and dig into the details of sharing space in today's ever more complicated joint use world.