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H5 Buys into Phoenix, Silicon Valley’s Data Center Backup
NextFort launched its Chandler, Arizona, data center in December 2013. (Image: NextFort)

H5 Buys into Phoenix, Silicon Valley’s Data Center Backup

Buys NextFort’s 12 MW data center in Chandler

H5 Data Centers has expanded into the Phoenix market, the most popular disaster recovery location for companies that keep their primary data center capacity in California, acquiring NextFort, which operates a data center in Chandler.

Phoenix is a strong enterprise data center market and a favorite disaster recovery location for California data centers, David Dunn, chief operating officer at H5, said in an interview.

There are also several major web company data centers in the area, such as eBay and PayPal. Apple is converting a 1.3-million-square-foot former manufacturing plant in nearby Mesa into a data center.

“You don’t have to sell people on the idea of Phoenix,” he said, explaining the Denver-based data center provider’s reasoning for buying the data center company in the Phoenix suburbs. “It’ already an established data center market.”

In addition to the demand, the market has relatively low energy rates – Dunn expects H5 to pay less than 7 cents per kWh – and low risk of natural disaster. The State of Arizona also offers tax incentives for data center operators.

The NextFort facility in Chandler currently has close to 30,000 square feet of data center space and access to about 12 MW of power. The capacity can be expanded to about 180,000 square feet and 30 MW, Dunn said.

The data center’s existing customer base is comprised of a variety of enterprises and providers of web services, as well as some bitcoin mining companies. Dunn declined to mention any specific customer names.

NextFort has shared at least one customer’s name publicly. In 2014, it announced that Gray Matter Industries, a provider of hosting services for bitcoin mining, had taken some space in the facility. It’s unclear whether Gray Matter is still a customer.

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