COWs, antennas and FIFA: How telecoms are boosting cellular networks during World Cup
It’s the MVP that herds of fans gathered at the newly branded Toronto Stadium probably won’t notice when they take in six FIFA World Cup matches: a 12-metre-tall COW.
Standing just outside the venue, it’s one of four temporary cell towers — known as Cells on Wheels — deployed by telecom giant Bell across key FIFA sites in Toronto and Vancouver for the duration of the tournament, including at fan festivals.
Along with dozens of newly installed antennas at the stadium usually known as BMO Field, the infrastructure is part of a $25-million effort by the company to expand network capacity in both cities for the surge in demand that the soccer games are expected to bring.
Bell’s senior technical product manager Aya Aboughanem said the carrier’s network is ready to handle that traffic, so fans should be able to use their cellphones without disruption.


