Enhanced O2 mobile connectivity for Guildford
December 16, 2025
Freshwave are deploying thirteen new 4G/5G outdoor small cells for O2 in Guildford city centre under an open access agreement with Surrey County Council. Nine are already live and enhancing connectivity in busy public areas, benefiting residents, businesses and visitors.
The small cells have been strategically placed in high-demand areas including the high street, around Guildford Castle and near Guildford Station, delivering enhanced mobile connectivity for O2 customers while maintaining the city centre’s historic charm.
By processing mobile traffic at street level, small cells help reduce pressure on the wider network. This allows more people to call, text and access data simultaneously, improving the overall mobile experience for O2 customers who visit, live and work in Guildford.
Matt Furniss, Cabinet Member for Highways, Transport and Economic Growth, at Surrey County Council, said: “We’re proud to be working with O2 and Freshwave to enhance mobile connectivity in Guildford, supporting our Digital Strategy and helping bring our high streets into the modern age. Better digital infrastructure means stronger local economies, more resilient communities, and a Surrey that thrives both today and tomorrow.”
Professor Robert Joyce, Director of Mobile Access Engineering at O2, said: “This small cell deployment in Guildford is a great example of our £700 million Mobile Transformation Plan in action. We’re bringing faster, more reliable connectivity to busy public spaces to meet record network demand, with targeted deployments delivering real benefits for communities.”
Neil Barnes, Mobile Network Operator Account Director at Freshwave, added: “We’re making it easier for the network operators to deliver mobile coverage where it matters most. In Guildford, our open access agreement with Surrey County Council, together with our partnership with O2, means faster rollout, less street clutter, and stronger connectivity for the community. It’s a smart, efficient way to support local needs while keeping the city’s character intact.”
Open access agreements allow local authorities to retain control of their street assets while working with different mobile network operators (MNOs) and neutral hosts such as Freshwave.
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