Most governments do not lack networks — they have too many. Police, health, education and tax each built their own, each with its own rented lines, its own contractor and its own outages. A bearer network replaces that with one backbone every agency rides as an isolated VPN: a core ring with two planes, so a cut fibre reroutes instead of stopping the city; QoS that keeps a video conference from being flattened by a backup job; and aggregation nodes a district grows into without a redesign. Sized honestly for a district, a prefecture or a province — and planned before anything is purchased.
Four problems we find in almost every city that calls us:
Three layers, two planes, one rule — each agency is isolated in software, not by buying it another network:
Architecture drawn by AtlasCommTech following carrier-grade design practice. Diagram labels are kept in English for engineering clarity.
Why us: our founder spent 13 years inside the Huawei partner ecosystem delivering carrier networks. A government bearer network is that same discipline applied to public services — the routing design, the VPN plan and the ring protection do not change just because the traffic belongs to a ministry.
The solution is sized to your requirements and budget first — the same architecture can be delivered on several vendors' product lines. We help you choose by supply availability in your destination country, budget and your team's operating habits.
Six things a properly planned bearer network does that a pile of rented lines never will:
Tell us how many agencies, how many sites and how far apart — the tier tells you the shape of the network:
| Scale tier | Typical site | What the design includes |
|---|---|---|
| District level | One district or county · a handful of agencies · sites within one town | A pair of core routers instead of a full ring, aggregation collapsed into the core, enterprise routers at each agency site, one VPN per agency, one firewall for shared internet egress. Two layers is honest at this size — we will say so rather than sell you a ring you cannot fill. |
| Prefecture / city level | A city with several districts · dozens of agencies · county towns to reach | A closed core ring across the city's main nodes, aggregation per district dual-homed to two core nodes, enterprise routers at every agency site, a full VPN plan with QoS profiles per service class, a security zone for inter-VPN policy and internet egress, and a management platform covering all three layers. |
| Provincial level | A province or state · multiple cities · long-haul spans between core sites | A provincial core ring with city rings hanging off it, high-density core nodes, dual-plane long-haul spans, VPN plan governed centrally but delegated per city, per-class QoS end to end, security zones at each egress, and a phased migration that moves agencies onto the bearer one at a time — never the whole province in one weekend. |
The solution is built from these equipment categories — the brand is chosen with you at design stage. Exact models depend on your span lengths, port counts, throughput and country — so we spec models after your requirements list, not before.
| Role | What it does |
|---|---|
| Core routers (ring nodes) | Close the ring between the main sites and carry every agency VPN across it. Sized by span length, optics and total throughput — this is the layer you buy headroom in, because it is the layer you cannot easily replace later. |
| Aggregation routers | Collect a district's agency sites and hand them up to two different core nodes. This is where a district grows: added sites land here without touching the core design. |
| Enterprise routers (agency access) | Terminate the bearer at each agency building, put that agency into its VPN, and apply its QoS profile. One router, one VPN, one profile — so an agency's traffic is classified where it enters, not somewhere in the middle. |
| Firewalls (security zone) | Enforce what may cross between agency VPNs, and guard the shared internet egress with intrusion prevention. Isolation is the default; every exception is a written policy in this box, not a favour someone did on a switch. |
| Core switches (data-centre handoff) | Where the bearer meets the shared government cloud or data centre. Each agency's VPN lands on its own segment inside the data centre, so consolidation of the network does not quietly consolidate the data. |
| Management platform | Topology, alarms, configuration backup and audit logs across core, aggregation and access. On a ten-year build with staff turnover, the platform is how the design survives the people who wrote it. |
Send us your agency list, your site list with distances, and what each agency actually runs — and the model list follows. That order keeps the design honest.
An engineer replies with a layered design, a draft VPN plan and the equipment-category list. Send us your requirements list — the model list follows.