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Data Center Building Boom In Silicon Valley

1sockchuck writes "Data center developers are building like mad in Silicon Valley, with seven active projects in Santa Clara alone. The building boom includes the resumption of several stalled projects that prompted concerns of a shortage of wholesale data center space in the Valley. The flurry of construction activity is different from the overbuilding during the dot-com boom, which was characterized by too much funding and too few customers. This time, industry experts say, the end of a funding drought has created a situation in which construction is struggling to stay ahead of demand from companies like Facebook — which just scarfed up an entire new data center in Santa Clara."

6 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. customers by seanadams.com · · Score: 3, Interesting
    During the dot-com boom, as I recall there was no shortage of customers for data centers, and every one I visited was filling up new space as fast as they could equip it. Mostly with expensive servers that were underutilized. The problem was those customers were ultimately not viable. They weren't building "on spec".

    Still I agree that this rising demand on the tail of the recession is a good sign, for the valley in particular.

    1. Re:customers by An+dochasac · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes the engineers and customers are in Silicon Valley, that's fine. But we have this thing called the Internet which means it is no longer necessary to put data centers anywhere near the customers or engineers. And if it's not necessary, it makes absolutely no sense for servers to compete for space in one of the most expensive real estate markets in the world when there are billions of acres of wasteland that would work just as well for a server farm. I've used a thin client desktop with the servers hosted over 3000 miles away and the latency was better than it was when the server was hosted only 8 miles away. Only video games and the kind of hyperactive trading that led to this month's stock crashes have latency requirements which would be significantly impacted by having your server in central valley or the Midwest or Iceland or Offshore and you will save an enormous amount of real estate and energy costs. I'm convinced that high-level corporate decisions are still based on inertia and nineteenth century factory-whistle mentality.

  2. Re:Strange move by uniquegeek · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ... and how far from a fault line? Seems about one of the dumbest place to build one to me as well.

  3. Re:A lot of commercial real estate sits empty by bezenek · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Several former office-space buildings are being converted to data centers.

    In a regular commute from West San Jose to the Google-plex area in Mountain View I have seen these changes. An existing office building has its windows removed/covered and then a sign goes up showing data center space available or the name of a data warehousing company.

    This conversion seems less wasteful as far as materials, but I am not sure how using an existing building compares to building a data-center-specific one for long-term energy efficiencies.

    -Todd

    --
    Omne ignotum pro magnifico.
  4. Power density?!?! by mcrbids · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Don't know if you've ever taken a look outside a data center, but they often have multiple, high-voltage power feed dead-end at the building. At my current colo, the excellent Herakles data center in Sacramento, CA, they are literally located directly under a major set of power lines.

    So you take some office building that was burning perhaps a couple hundred watts per 100 SqFt during mid-day, and colocate 42U racks within, raising energy density from maybe 200 watts/100 SqFT to a few thousand. To give some idea, I personally oversee about 3,000 watts in a single 1U rack at my colo, well over 200 cores, and many terabytes of data. And that's in a single 1U rack, maybe 24" wide and 36" deep, with some allowance for aisleway... and my situation isn't even mildly unusual.

    We're not talking 3,000 watts capacity, we're talking 3,000 watts 24x7 continuous draw, of redundant, backed-up power - the most expensive kind. Whole houses usually don't draw this much. And this is a *single* 42U rack.

    This is feasible? That's a *lot* of power...

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  5. Re:Training/certification by timmarhy · · Score: 3, Interesting
    cisco certification, MS certification (not just MSCE...). work experience in another data centre is an obvious plus, but any experience managing large networks and server would do.

    it's more about who you know nto what you know still

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    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....