Streamline Internet.
Ground-break to turn-up in Hendry County.
Vertical Axis is the tower contractor behind Streamline Internet’s Southwest Florida fixed-wireless network. Four 4-carrier sites built turnkey from ground-break through turn-up, with additional sites in development. 300-foot towers, foundations carrying hundreds of cubic yards of concrete, dewatering on a high water table, and night pours to beat the Florida heat. Over 20 microwave alignments hitting spec on the first sweep. Full Tarana radio install across the live footprint. Service went live to Hendry County subscribers on April 1, 2026, after years of broken promises from the legacy carriers.
We’ve trusted Vertical Axis with some of the most demanding builds in our network, and they’ve delivered every time. They’ve taken four of our 4-carrier sites from ground-break all the way through turn-up, including 300-foot towers and massive foundations requiring hundreds of cubic yards of concrete. Projects that demand real precision and experience to get right. They’ve also handled over 20 microwave alignments for us, all hitting spec from our coordinators without issues. That level of consistency is hard to find. What stands out most is the quality of their work and the mindset of their crews. Clean installs, strong communication, and a team that takes pride in doing things the right way. When you’re building infrastructure at this scale, you need a contractor you don’t have to second-guess. That’s exactly what Vertical Axis has been for us.
A locally-owned ISP, an SLFRF grant, and a buildout the big carriers walked away from.
Streamline Internet is a locally-owned fixed-wireless ISP based out of Southwest Florida. The company was built by CEO Lou Elliott to do one specific thing: cover the rural Hendry County and Southwest Florida households the legacy providers wrote off years ago. Per Streamline’s own framing: “The big providers wrote off rural Hendry County and Golden Gate Estates years ago. We built an emergency-grade network specifically for you.”
The buildout is supported in whole or in part by federal award SLFRP0125, awarded to the State of Florida by the U.S. Department of the Treasury under State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (SLFRF).
What Streamline needed from a tower contractor was straightforward in principle and not so straightforward in practice: new 4-carrier tower sites stood up across the service territory on a grant-disbursement schedule, with foundations and steel sized for long service life, RF install discipline good enough to actually hit the rural-broadband coverage obligations, and microwave backhaul aligned tight enough to clear the path coordinator on the first try. Four of those 4-carrier sites are now complete and turned up, with additional sites in development.
The communities Streamline serves.
Service is live today to subscribers in:
- LaBelle (downtown)
- Port LaBelle
- Felda
- Fort Denaud
- Golden Gate Estates (Collier County)
With expansion next on deck for:
- Pioneer Plantation
- Montura Ranch Estates
- LaDeca Acres
- Clewiston
The footprint covers a meaningful slice of the rural Southwest Florida households that have spent years on satellite at $130/month or no service at all. WINK News reported at launch on April 1, 2026 that Port LaBelle residents were finally getting reliable broadband “after years of broken promises.”
The technology stack on the live network.
Streamline runs Tarana fixed-wireless radios on the towers Vertical Axis built. Vertical Axis handled the full Tarana RF install across the live sites: base nodes mounted to spec on the new steel, antenna alignment, weatherproofing, grounding bonded to the tower ring, and DC-side cabling done clean enough to inspect. Subscriber speeds reach up to 600 Mbps on the platform, with three independent data feeds per tower (wireless plus ground fiber redundancy), battery backup, and generator support at select sites. None of that performance lands without disciplined install: radios aligned to spec, weatherproofing done per manufacturer procedure, and grounding bonded to the tower ring before anything goes on-air.
Full platform context lives on the Antenna & Radio Install service page and the broader WISP industry page, where Tarana sits alongside the other RF stacks Vertical Axis installs.
Four 4-carrier sites complete. More in development. Foundations built for the long run.
The bulk of the Vertical Axis scope on Streamline is new 4-carrier sites taken turnkey from ground-break through turn-up. Four are complete and turned up. More are in development. These are not infill drops on existing infrastructure. They are full new builds: site walk, civil, foundation, steel up, RF install, grounding, fiber and DC plant, commissioning, and turnover documentation, all under one contract.
Several of the sites are 300-foot self-support towers sized for 4-carrier loading. Foundation pours on the heavier sites ran into the hundreds of cubic yards of concrete per tower, with deep mat foundations sized to the geotechnical report and the stamped tower load case. That work is exactly what the Foundations & Civil service page covers, and it’s the part of the build that quietly determines whether the tower is still plumb and serviceable in 2046.
What 'turnkey ground-break to turn-up' actually means on this engagement.
The full per-site scope ran through:
- Site preparation and access. Clearing, grading, equipment access road on rural sites that don’t have one to start.
- Foundation civil. Excavation, rebar mat, anchor-bolt placement to template, conduit stub-ups, and the concrete pour itself, sized per the stamped foundation drawing.
- Steel erection. Self-support sections flown into place per the manufacturer’s stacking sequence, plumb verified to TIA-222-H L/1500 tolerance, bolt torque verified per the spec sheet.
- Grounding and bonding. Ground ring with exothermic welds, bonded to the tower steel and the equipment cabinet. Surge suppressors in line on every cable run before any radio went on-air.
- Cable plant. Fiber, DC, and Cat6 down the tower with weatherproofed terminations and a clean entry into the equipment shelter.
- Tarana RF install. Base nodes, sector antennas, and microwave dishes mounted, aligned, weatherproofed, and bonded.
- Commissioning and sweep. VSWR on coax runs, insertion loss on fiber, RSL verification against the link budget on every microwave path, alignment confirmed against the stamped RF design.
- Documentation. As-built drawings, sweep logs, photo records, and FAA / FCC closeout filings handed over with the site.
The full scope is the New Site Builds service page. Streamline is one of the engagements that page is built around.
What Hendry County throws at a foundation crew.
Two things make foundations here harder than the drawing suggests:
- A high water table. Multiple Streamline sites required active dewatering to get a clean excavation down to engineered depth. Well points and sump pumps running through the dig, rebar mats tied in a pit that wanted to fill back up, and sequencing the pour for the same day the dewatering held. Miss that window and the whole hole resets.
- Scorching Florida heat. High-volume pours under direct summer sun risk the concrete setting too fast and losing strength. The fix on the heavier 4-carrier mats was night pours: trucks staged at dusk, the mat placed through the cooler hours, and finishing done before dawn. Cure temperatures stayed in spec, the concrete hit strength on the 28-day break, and the steel-up schedule held.
Neither condition shows up on a stamped drawing. Both show up on a build log.




Steel up, flown into place through the stacking sequence.
Once the foundation hit strength on the 28-day break, the stacking sequence started. Self-support tower sections flown into place from the crane per the manufacturer’s assembly drawing, one section bolted off before the next leaves the ground. Drone footage from near the top of one of the Streamline sites mid-sequence.
Plumb verified to TIA-222-H L/1500 with a total station on closeout. Bolt torque verified per the spec sheet. The crane leaves the site when the structure is standing, plumb, and signed off. Only then do climbers go up with the RF gear.
Twenty-plus microwave alignments. Every one hitting spec on the first sweep.
Across the engagement, Vertical Axis crews have executed over 20 microwave alignments for Streamline. Per Lou Elliott, every one of those alignments has hit spec from the path coordinators on the first sweep, with no rework. That number is worth pausing on.
Microwave alignment is the part of a fixed-wireless backhaul build where the difference between an experienced crew and a generic tower contractor shows up in the path coordinator’s report. A misaligned dish reads as low RSL on commissioning, gets rejected by the coordinator, and the crew has to re-climb to fix it. On a 20-link program, that rework adds up fast: extra crew time, extra crane time on the heavier dishes, and a slipping commissioning schedule that pushes the next link out by days.
Streamline didn’t see any of that. Every microwave path the Vertical Axis crew aligned came in inside spec. Path RSL matching the link budget, no path-coordinator pushback, no re-climbs to chase a couple of dB. That consistency is what Lou’s quote above is referring to.
Why the alignments hit spec the first time.
Three things, repeatedly:
- Crane and rigging discipline. Dishes set on the steel with the centerline within fabrication tolerance before the crew ever takes their first RSL reading. The bigger the dish, the more this matters. A 6 ft dish flexed during crane lift is a dish that will never align cleanly.
- The right alignment tooling on the truck. Spectrum-aware alignment using the radio’s own native diagnostics (RSL telemetry, packet error rate, modulation lock state), driven by an experienced lead hand who knows when to keep tightening and when to back off and recheck the steel.
- Weatherproofing done last and done right. No coax-seal tape applied until the link is confirmed inside spec on both ends. No cable strain at the radio connector. Boots, drip loops, and grounding kits done per manufacturer procedure before the climber clears the dish.
For the full scope and SLA framework on microwave work, see the Microwave Backhaul service page.

Weather cameras at the marquee sites for a future TV partner.
Beyond the broadband infrastructure, Vertical Axis crews installed weather cameras on the marquee Streamline sites for usage by a forthcoming TV broadcast partner. Camera platform mounting, power and data drops down the tower, weatherproofed cable entries, and final sighting of the camera azimuth all in scope.
The pattern is one Vertical Axis runs for other anchor WISP clients as well. The Alabama Lightwave case study covers a parallel statewide weather-camera deployment for WBRC Birmingham across the Alabama Lightwave network. Same install discipline, same weatherproofing standards, same coordination with the broadcast partner on framing and feed integrity.
Three of the live Streamline camera views are below:
Port LaBelle, downtown LaBelle, and Felda.
The cameras at Port LaBelle, downtown LaBelle, and Felda sit on Streamline towers Vertical Axis built. Each view above is the live feed framed at the camera’s commissioning azimuth, looking out across the same neighborhoods the Streamline radios are now serving.
Each install was scoped against the broadcast partner’s framing requirements: camera height, azimuth, sun-angle considerations on the rising and setting Florida sun, and feed-redundancy on the data path back from the tower. The TV partner identity is held until that side of the announcement is ready.



How the buildout sequenced.
From the State of Florida announcing broadband funding for Hendry County in early 2023 through service going live to subscribers in April 2026.
February 2023: Florida announces Hendry County broadband funding
Florida Department of Economic Opportunity announces the first round of Broadband Opportunity Program awards. Hendry County is one of the multi-county Southwest Florida service territories funded for fixed-wireless deployment alongside parallel state and federal SLFRF allocations targeting the same unserved households.
2024: Site selection and engagement awarded to Vertical Axis
Streamline Internet selects Vertical Axis as the tower contractor for the Hendry County buildout. New 4-carrier tower sites scoped across the LaBelle, Port LaBelle, Felda, Fort Denaud, and surrounding rural service area, with the Hendry County EOC tower added to the rollout under a separate county-commission authorization.
Spring 2025: Foundations poured with dewatering and night pours
Excavation, rebar placement, anchor-bolt setting, and concrete pours executed across the new sites. Active dewatering (well points and sump pumps) held the high water table back through each dig. Heavier 4-carrier mats poured at night to keep concrete cure temperatures in spec under Florida heat. Site civil and access prep on rural parcels that didn’t have an equipment access road to start.
Summer 2025: Steel up and stacking complete
Self-support tower sections flown into place per the manufacturer’s stacking sequence on the new builds. Plumb verified to TIA-222-H L/1500. Bolt torque verified per spec. Equipment compounds finished out and grounded. By July 2025, multiple sites were standing tall and ready for RF.
Late 2025: Tarana RF install and microwave backhaul
Tarana base nodes, sector antennas, and microwave backhaul dishes installed across the live footprint. More than 20 microwave alignments executed against the path coordinator’s spec, every one passing on the first sweep. Cable plant, fiber, DC, and grounding finished out and commissioned per manufacturer procedure.
Q1 2026: Weather cameras and final commissioning
Weather cameras installed on the marquee Streamline sites at Port LaBelle, downtown LaBelle, and Felda for a forthcoming broadcast partner. Final sweeps, RSL verification, and as-built documentation completed across the live network in the run-up to subscriber launch.
April 1, 2026: Service goes live to subscribers
Streamline Internet officially goes live in Felda, Fort Denaud, downtown LaBelle, and Port LaBelle. WINK News covers the launch the following week with reporting from Port LaBelle households who had spent years on $130-per-month satellite or no service at all. Lake-O News follows with a Lou Elliott update detailing further site rollout in Pioneer Plantation, Wheeler Estates (groundbreaking May 2026), and the Fort Denaud Cemetery site.
Today: Coverage expanding across the next-on-deck communities
Service expands across Golden Gate Estates and into Pioneer Plantation, Montura Ranch Estates, LaDeca Acres, and Clewiston. Vertical Axis crews remain on the engagement for the next round of new sites, ongoing maintenance, and the recurring inspection rotation as Streamline’s footprint grows.
What the engagement covers.
New 4-carrier tower sites (four complete, more in development), plus the broader RF, microwave, weather-camera, and ongoing-maintenance scope across the Streamline footprint.
- New site builds turnkey from ground-break through turn-up across the Hendry County and Southwest Florida service area. Four 4-carrier sites complete, with additional sites in development
- Foundations and civil including deep mat foundations carrying hundreds of cubic yards of concrete each, active dewatering on high-water-table lots, and night pours to hold concrete cure temperatures in spec under Florida heat
- Tower erection of self-support structures up to 300 ft sized for current and future multi-tenant loading
- Tarana radio install across the live network. Base nodes, sector antennas, weatherproofing, and grounding done per manufacturer procedure
- Sector and backhaul install including more than 20 microwave alignments, each hitting spec from the path coordinator on the first sweep
- Microwave backhaul dish install and precision alignment for the inter-site backhaul connecting the new towers
- Weather-camera install at the marquee sites (Port LaBelle, downtown LaBelle, Felda) for a forthcoming TV broadcast partner
- Cable plant including fiber, DC, and Cat6 down the tower with weatherproofed terminations and clean entries into the equipment shelter
- Grounding and bonding to Motorola R56 across every site, surge suppressors in line before radios go on-air
- FAA / FCC closeout filings as part of the per-site documentation handover
- As-built drawings, sweep logs, and photo records delivered per site for grant-program compliance
- Maintenance and inspection rotation across the new tower fleet as the network matures
- Coordination with the Hendry County Commission on the EOC tower portion of the rollout
- Schedule discipline against Florida thunderstorm season on the foundation pour and steel-up windows
Running a similar scope?
Tell us what you're building. We come back with a line-itemed quote and a schedule.
What the tower work has enabled.
A case study should name the outcomes, not just the scope. Here’s what the Streamline buildout has delivered for Southwest Florida households.
Five rural Southwest Florida communities online with reliable broadband
LaBelle, Port LaBelle, Felda, Fort Denaud, and Golden Gate Estates are live to subscribers as of April 1, 2026. Plans next-on-deck for Pioneer Plantation, Montura Ranch Estates, LaDeca Acres, and Clewiston. Households that spent years on $130-per-month satellite or no service at all now have a fixed-wireless option capable of up to 600 Mbps, with a lifetime price lock from Streamline.
Four 4-carrier sites turned up against the SLFRF grant schedule, with more in development
Four Streamline new builds taken from ground-break through turn-up on the program schedule so far, with additional sites in development. Foundations carrying hundreds of cubic yards of concrete each on the 4-carrier sites, dewatering held through the dig on high-water-table lots, night pours under Florida heat, 300-ft self-support steel up to spec, and full Tarana RF install commissioned and ready for subscriber traffic. Per-site documentation delivered for the federal SLFRP0125 reporting cycle.
20+ microwave alignments at first-sweep spec
Every one of the 20-plus microwave links Vertical Axis crews aligned for Streamline came in within spec on the first commissioning sweep, per the path coordinator’s reports. No re-climbs, no rework, no schedule slippage chasing a couple of dB.
Weather cameras on the marquee sites ready for a TV partner
Three weather cameras installed at the marquee Streamline towers (Port LaBelle, downtown LaBelle, Felda) and ready for a forthcoming broadcast partner. Same install discipline as the broadband scope: cleanly mounted, properly powered, weatherproofed, and framed against the broadcast partner’s azimuth requirements.
Services delivered on this account.
Eight service lines from our 15-service catalog active on the Streamline engagement so far, with the rotation continuing as additional sites move into construction. Click any card for the full scope, process, and standards.
New Site Builds
Empty dirt to operational tower, one crew, one point of contact.
Foundations & Civil
Excavation, rebar, concrete, grading, fencing, and ground rings.
Tower Erection
Guyed, self-supporting, and monopole structures up to 300ft.
Sector & Backhaul
Sector antennas, backhaul dishes, horn arrays, aligned and sealed.
Microwave Backhaul
Point-to-point links, redundant rings, licensed and unlicensed.
Antenna & Radio Install
Antennas, radios, fiber, DC, and Cat6. Ubiquiti, Cambium, Mimosa, Tarana, Nokia, and more.
Grounding & Cadwelding
Ground rings, exothermic welds, bonding to NEC and manufacturer spec.
Maintenance & Inspection
Inspections, repairs, and post-storm response for a 20-year asset.
Built to standard.
Same engineering framework Vertical Axis runs on every grant-funded WISP buildout. Documented per visit, signable by a structural engineer, audit-ready for the state broadband office and federal Treasury reporting on the SLFRF award.
TIA-222-H
ANSI structural standard for antenna-supporting structures. Self-support steel on every Streamline new build verified plumb to L/1500 tolerance, bolt torque per the spec sheet, equipment loading math run against actual gear on the pallet.
ACI 318 / Florida geotechnical practice
Concrete design and construction per the American Concrete Institute, executed against the project geotechnical report. Mat-foundation reinforcement, anchor-bolt placement to template, and concrete placement under hot-and-humid Florida conditions.
FCC Part 15 / Part 101
Part 15 unlicensed for the Tarana access layer, Part 101 licensed where the microwave backhaul required licensed coordination. License filing and path coordination handled in scope.
Motorola R56
Industry-standard grounding and bonding for communication sites. Default on every Streamline tower. Ground ring with exothermic welds bonded to the tower steel before any radio went on-air.
NFPA 780
Lightning protection. Non-negotiable in Florida given the lightning strike density. Every Streamline tower carries lightning protection bonded through the grounding system.
FAA AC 70/7460-1M / FCC Part 17
FAA notification and FCC ASR registration where the structure triggered notification. Filings sequenced into the construction timeline alongside the foundation and steel-erection schedule.
OSHA 1926 / ANSI A10.48
Safety at height. 100% tie-off, authorized rescue, site-specific safety plan on every climb. NATE ClimberSafe / SafetyLMS on every lead hand.
SLFRF / U.S. Treasury reporting
Federal SLFRP0125 closeout-documentation discipline. As-builts, sweep logs, photo records, and milestone-completion records assembled per site for the State of Florida and U.S. Treasury reporting cycle on the State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds award.
Published sources.
Independent press coverage and primary sources cited above. Use these for grant applications, BEAD reference packages, or any context where third-party verification is useful.
Local broadcast coverage of the April 1, 2026 service launch in Port LaBelle, with quotes from Lou Elliott and the residents Streamline first connected.
Lou Elliott’s update on the rollout. Tower-site progress at Felda, Port LaBelle, the EOC, and the county jail; near-completion sites at Pioneer Plantation and the shooting range; Wheeler Estates groundbreaking next; future site at the Fort Denaud Cemetery.
Live coverage area, plan tiers ($55 to $105 per month with lifetime price lock), and the company’s positioning on rural Southwest Florida households the legacy carriers wrote off.
State of Florida announcement of the first Broadband Opportunity Program awards. The Hendry County and Southwest Florida service area was one of the multi-county allocations in the first round.
Regional public-radio coverage of the Southwest Florida broadband allocations alongside the Hendry County award.
FAQ about this project.
What is Streamline Internet?
What is Vertical Axis's role on the Streamline buildout?
Tower contractor for Streamline’s new tower infrastructure. Four 4-carrier sites taken turnkey from ground-break through turn-up to date, with additional sites in development. 300-foot self-support towers, the foundations to carry them, dewatering on the high water table, and night pours under Florida heat. Full Tarana radio install across the live network. More than 20 microwave alignments executed against the path coordinator’s spec, every one passing on the first sweep. Weather-camera installs at the marquee sites (Port LaBelle, downtown LaBelle, Felda) for a forthcoming TV broadcast partner. Ongoing maintenance and the inspection rotation as the network matures.
Lou Elliott’s words on the engagement, in his own quote on this page: “We’ve trusted Vertical Axis with some of the most demanding builds in our network, and they’ve delivered every time.”
Where does Streamline serve today?
Live to subscribers as of April 1, 2026:
- LaBelle (downtown)
- Port LaBelle
- Felda
- Fort Denaud
- Golden Gate Estates (Collier County)
Next on deck: Pioneer Plantation, Montura Ranch Estates, LaDeca Acres, and Clewiston.
What kind of speeds does the Streamline network deliver?
What grant program funded the Streamline buildout?
Per <a href="https://www.winknews.com/news/hendry/port-labelle-families-finally-get-reliable-internet-after-years-of-broken-promises/article_05716909-08a8-444d-b18e-d5f556e176df.html" rel="noopener" target="_blank">WINK News reporting, the project is supported in whole or in part by federal award number SLFRP0125 awarded to the State of Florida by the U.S. Department of the Treasury. That’s State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (SLFRF): ARPA dollars flowed through the state, distinct from the BEAD and ReConnect rails most rural broadband builds are funded under.
Vertical Axis’s delivery on SLFRF-funded broadband infrastructure is a credential that complements our BEAD-ready and ReConnect-ready posture for state broadband office and tribal broadband program work.
How many sites has Vertical Axis built for Streamline so far?
What about the 300-foot towers?
What made the Hendry County foundations harder than a typical pour?
Two things repeatedly:
- High water table. Multiple Streamline sites required active dewatering (well points and sump pumps) to hold a clean excavation down to engineered depth while the rebar mat was tied and the pour went in. Sequencing matters: miss the window where dewatering is holding, and the hole resets.
- Florida heat. High-volume pours under direct summer sun risk concrete setting too fast and losing strength. The fix on the heavier 4-carrier mats was night pours. Trucks staged at dusk, mat placed through the cooler hours, finishing done before dawn. Cure temperatures stayed in spec and the 28-day breaks hit target.
How did Vertical Axis hit spec on every microwave alignment the first try?
Three things, repeatedly:
- Crane and rigging discipline so dishes set on the steel within fabrication tolerance before the crew takes their first RSL reading.
- Native-radio alignment tooling driven by an experienced lead hand who knows when to keep tightening and when to back off and recheck the steel.
- Weatherproofing applied last and applied right, so the link is confirmed inside spec on both ends before any coax-seal tape goes on.
Full microwave scope and SLA framework lives on the Microwave Backhaul service page.
Did Vertical Axis install the Tarana radios as well?
Yes. Vertical Axis handled the full Tarana RF install across the live Streamline network. Base nodes mounted to spec on the new steel, antenna alignment, weatherproofing, grounding bonded to the tower ring, and DC-side cabling done clean enough to inspect.
Tarana sits alongside Ubiquiti, Cambium, Mimosa, Nokia, and the carrier-grade microwave platforms on the Antenna & Radio Install service page. The same crew is platform-fluent on the rest of the WISP RF stack as well; Streamline’s choice of Tarana fits their non-line-of-sight rural footprint particularly well.
What about the weather cameras?
Vertical Axis installed weather cameras at the marquee Streamline sites: Port LaBelle, downtown LaBelle, and Felda. Camera-platform mounting, power and data drops down the tower, weatherproofed cable entries, and final sighting of the camera azimuth all in scope. The cameras are queued for a forthcoming TV broadcast partner; the partner identity stays held until that side of the announcement is ready.
Vertical Axis runs the same install discipline on the Alabama Lightwave statewide WBRC weather-camera network across Birmingham broadcast television’s footprint.
Can I use this case study in a grant application?
Do you have similar case studies for other ISPs?
How do I get started on a similar project?
Send us the scope. Specifically useful: site or site list (address or coordinates), tower type and height, gear list or stamped RF design, grant-program context (BEAD, ReConnect, SLFRF, state program), and your target window.
Request a quote here or call us at (763) 280-6050. Most WISP and rural-broadband scopes get a line-itemed quote back inside a week. Multi-site programs take longer because the schedule coordination is the harder part of the work.
A different project scope? Send it over. We answer every scoping call.
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Running an SLFRF, BEAD, or state-grant buildout?
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