Posted By Rich Miller On June 18, 2007 @ 9:10 am In Equinix | Comments Disabled
SECAUCUS, N.J. – The distance from the parking lot to the equipment area of Equinix’ Secaucus data center is only a couple of hundred feet. But the trip is, in many ways, a journey to the center of the business Internet, featuring tight security and industrial-strength infrastructure. Visitors must pass through five biometric security stations to enter the main data center floor, a vast area of walkways bathed in purple light, flanked on either side by customer cages that are dark save for the blinking server lights.
Those servers power applications for the world’s largest financial institutions and Internet content providers. To ensure they never go offline, the facility is supported by 18 Liebert UPS units, more than 6,000 batteries, six 2-megawatt Caterpillar diesel generators, and dual power feeds from the local electric utility, PSE&G. These are the new table stakes in the enterprise data center world, and the growth of high-density computing is raising the infrastructure ante even further.
The leading players in the industry are betting big on premium engineering in next-generation facilities. It hasn’t been cheap. Equinix is in the midst of an expansion of its network in which it will spend half a billion dollars on advanced data centers. It’s not alone. Digital Realty Trust [1], Savvis Communications [2], 365 Main [3], i/o Data Centers [4], Terremark [5] and Sabey Corp. [6] are all building or retrofitting multiple new data centers.
Equinix, for one, says the investment in infrastructure is paying off, attracting the premier enterprise customers most coveted by data center operators. Many of those customers are filling their cages with blade servers, a trend which presents an ongoing challenge to Equinix and its competitors, who must manage the “hot spots” in their facilities.
“Power and cooling have totally changed the industry in 18 months,” said Margie Backaus, the chief business officer of Equinix. “We’ve been a beneficiary of that.”
Equinix is not just building out, but building up. The new data center will have 40-foot ceilings, reflecting the company’s approach to data center design. There are no raised floors in Equinix data centers. The equipment rests on a slab, with all the cooling infrastructure overhead, and cabling managed by a multi-layer aerial tray system that runs throughout the company’s data centers. The cabling tray system is patented, as is Equinix’ biometric security system.
NY4 is one of a series of next-generation data centers Equinix is building in its major markets. The company is bringing similar centers online in Chicago and Ashburn, Va., and has bought real estate in Ashburn to accommodate additional centers. Once complete, the expansion will give Equinix an additional 600,000 square feet of premium data center space, enough for an additional 6,000 customer cabinets.
With these projects still in progress, Equinix announced a new round of data center expansions [7] last week, qhich will add a fourth data center in the Los Angeles area with a first phase providing space for up to 1,700 cabinets, and an expansion of its existing data center in Santa Clara, Calif. to accommodate another 1,100 new cabinets.
Article printed from Data Center Knowledge: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com
URL to article: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2007/06/18/building-bigger-denser-and-cooler/
URLs in this post:
[1] Digital Realty Trust: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/digital_realty_trust-index.html
[2] Savvis Communications: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/savvis-index.html
[3] 365 Main: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/365_main-index.html
[4] i/o Data Centers: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2007/Jan/22/three_projects_in_works_for_io_data_centers.html
[5] Terremark: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/terremark-index.html
[6] Sabey Corp.: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/sabey-index.html
[7] new round of data center expansions: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2007/Jun/14/equinix_big_expansions_in_la_santa_clara.html
[8] Rich Miller: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/author/richm/
Click here to print.
Copyright © 2011 Data Center Knowledge. All rights reserved.