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CARMEN project fosters carrier-grade mesh networking
Source(s): 
IMDEA Networks Institute

The CARMEN project will allow the provision of carrier-grade services over wireless mesh networks comprised of heterogenous radio technologies, meaning more available, easier-to-deploy services at lower cost.


Institute IMDEA Networks, a research institute in the area of computer networking backed by the Madrid Regional Government, in collaboration with NETCOM Research Group from University Carlos III of Madrid, has announced the successful conclusion with outstanding grades of the European Project CARMEN (CARrier grade MEsh Networks), designed to enable the provisioning of carrier-grade services over wireless mesh networks comprised of heterogeneous radio technologies. The project ran from the beginning of January 2008 to the end of January 2011, and included the participation of nine partners from the public and private sectors, including four universities, three telecommunications companies and two equipment vendors. The project was initially led by Prof. Dr Arturo Azcorra, currently on leave from his post as Director of IMDEA Networks, and later by Dr. Albert Banchs, the Institute’s Deputy Director.

Current backhaul solutions for radio access networks consist mostly of wired leased lines or point-to-point, high-capacity radio links, both of which are slow to deploy, expensive and not always available. Mesh networks, on the other hand, are "self-healing", making them very reliable, and are also economical, reusable, and significantly easier and faster to deploy than current systems. These features make them particularly well suited to incremental deployments or temporary scenarios such as natural disasters.

Among the achievements embodied in the CARMEN architecture are support for multiple wireless technologies, the efficient use of radio resources, capacity-aware mobility management, support for broadcast and multicast services, and self-configuration capabilities, features supported through the creation of new protocols and algorithms. The success of CARMEN will pave the way for the development of new carrier-grade mesh wireless products, lower deployment and maintenance costs for operators and better services at lower cost for users.

The project has resulted in the creation of a specialized IEEE study group, 12 different patent filings by the industrial partners, the publication of an RFC and contributions to various IETF working groups, 56 articles published in recognized journals and presented at international conferences and workshops, as well as special issues of journals and magazines, panels and sessions and public workshops. Additionally, the project operators are planning to showcase CARMEN-derived technology in different events and field-trials, and the academic partners are planning further research into radio resource management and heterogeneous wireless systems.

The partners participating in CARMEN were University Carlos III of Madrid with Institute IMDEA Networks, Alcatel-Lucent Deutschland AG, British Telecommunications PLC, Deutsche Telekom AG, Fraunhofer Gesellschaft Zur Foerderung DerAngewandten Forschung E.V., NEC Europe Ltd., AGH University of Science and Technology, University College Dublin and National University of Ireland, Dublin.


Instance of the performance of testbed demonstrations and presentations


Instance of the performance of testbed demonstrations and presentations


Instance of the performance of testbed demonstrations and presentations

Three instances of the performance of testbed demonstrations and presentations during the final audit of the project which was held in Berlin (Germany) on January 28th, 2010.

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