T-Mobile has to remove some old antennas (and accompanying infrastructure) and replace them with a brand-new stand-alone cell tower, but people fear property devaluation will happen.
T-Mobile has to remove some old antennas (and accompanying infrastructure) and replace them with a brand-new stand-alone cell tower, but people fear property devaluation will happen.
The magenta carrier has to get rid of old equipment from the top of a water tower in Naperville. T-Mobile has been renting space on Naperville’s 160-foot water tower at 1301 Clyde Drive for more than 20 years. However, in August, the company will need to dismantle its equipment due to a 2018 ordinance gradually eliminating private infrastructure from city-owned water towers.
Next, a proposition followed, but it didn’t fly at a recent Planning and Zoning Commission meeting in the Chicago suburb.
T-Mobile is seeking city approval to build a 190-foot freestanding tower near Naperville’s existing water tower to maintain network coverage.
Домой
United States
USA — IT T-Mobile will drive property prices down, Chicago suburb residents claim