WSTA Data Center Seminar:
Data Center Real Estate
An expert talks about everything you need to consider when
choosing where to put your data center.
On Tuesday August 7, 2007, I walked down the street from our Manhattan
office and attended (as press) a seminar offered by the Wall
Street Technology Association (WSTA) called "Next
Generation Data Center Challenges and Solutions."
Although the seminar was directed at the CTOs of major financial firms,
the issues that these companies face are the issues that ISPs are facing
now or will face in the future when they grow.
Ronald
Bowman, executive vice president at Tishman,
spoke at a session that was called "Outside Plant Considerations for Multi
Market Data Center Site Selection" and could have been called, "Where
to Put Your Data Center."
Bowman disarmingly began his presentation by admitting that he still
cannot explain what he does to his own children, and added that real estate
clients are becoming more and more knowledgeable, challenging real estate
specialists to add value. Then he showed how he adds value and what he
does.
Variables
Choosing a data center site, Bowman said, requires juggling a massive
number of variables. You want access to power and fiber. If you're using
water cooling, you want access to water and space for a reservoir. You
want to know whether the land you're looking at it subject to flooding
or other hazards.
There are legal and regulatory issues. You want to know the state sales
tax. He urged financial companies to think outside the box, which is the
local area. "You may need to back up critical apps in Connecticut, New
Jersey, or Pennsylvania, but non-critical apps can be backed up in states
where there's no sales tax, such as Oregon, Georgia, or New Hampshire."
Federal regulators want financial firms to have backup sites far from
New York City. In 2002, a group of government agencies with responsibilities
for the U.S. financial system (the SEC, the Federal Reserve, and something
called the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency) issued an RFC and
draft white paper called the Interagency
Concept Release: Draft Interagency White Paper on Sound Practices to Strengthen
the Resilience of the U. S. Financial System. In 2003, the agencies
summarized comments and issued what Bowman called White
Paper 2.
Initially, the agencies had appeared to favor requiring financial institutions
to have backup sites hundreds or even thousands of miles away from headquarters,
but the institutions themselves opposed a specific number. Instead, the
agencies settled for urging financial institutions to have backup sites
some distance away, writing:
"long-standing principles of business continuity
planning suggest that back-up arrangements should be as far away from
the primary site as necessary to avoid being subject to the same set of
risks as the primary location. Back-up sites should not rely on the same
infrastructure components (e.g., transportation, telecommunications, water
supply, and electric power) used by the primary site. Moreover, the operation
of such sites should not be impaired by a wide-scale evacuation at or
the inaccessibility of staff that service the primary site. The effectiveness
of back-up arrangements in recovering from a wide-scale disruption should
be confirmed through testing."
Bowman said that this has come to be interpreted as meaning that backup
sites should be 250 miles away or more. He pointed out that financial
institutions face opposing pressures. "Networks need to be centralized
for real time applications, but they need to be decentralized for backup
and recovery."
We think that these requirements could, if properly regarded, force companies
to have backup sites farther away. As far as we know, there are three
major electrical grids in the U.S.: East, West, and Texas. This is a simplification,
of course. There are a local power systems, such as hydro power in the
Northwest.
Bowman said that most "acts of god" effect a radius of 20 to 45 miles.
Of course, some are larger. Again, we disagree. Katrina was larger than
that, as was the northeast
blackout of 2003.
We have been arguing for some time that data centers on the East Coast
and West Coast should have backup agreements structured like peering agreements
where one data center on one coast serves as backup for the opposite coast.
Basic considerations for data centers
Bowman urged executives to remember that elements of data centers
don't last forever. A UPS system may be rated for 15 years, but could
have a shorter effective life if used regularly.
Being in a state without sales tax (such as New Hampshire, Georgia,
or Oregon) could save a financial firm $100 million dollars.
When looking at a data center site, you want to know the availability
of fiber, free space optics, satellite, and wireless. You want to
know the local tax rates and power prices. You can find your own flood
maps.
He was asked to advise on a recent project, he said, where people
were already on the ground surveying. He found online that it was
a superfund site. "It was on the corner of main and main for crap,
and I don't mean allegedly cancerous substancesI mean substances
that people die from."
Cities that have a lot of available fiber, Bowman said, seem to have
a population of about 250,000. "Most people feel you have to choose between
a cornfield site and an urban site." (We recently wrote about a webhost
that has one of each: a data center in Iowa and one in Chicago.)
$2,200 per square foot
He said that a tier four data center can cost $2,200 per square foot,
at which point clients have sticker shock and start looking for savings.
A backup electric feed, he said, costs 75 percent of the primary,
because the utility has to set aside that transmission capacity and
not sell it to anyone else. Some people prefer to put in more generators,
which is not cheap, but is not as expensive as the second power line.
Some people insist on four independent sources of fiber, but in
a cornfield situation, they're likely to all be on the same right
of way, subject to being cut by the same drunk driver.
Cornfields have hidden costs, and urban areas have unexamined benefits.
"People need to think about data centers on a TCO basis. It's not a $13
million plot of land. It's a $1.7 billion investment amortized over 15
years."
Environmental regulations can be a surprise. "It's the biggest gotcha.
You can spend 6 to 18 months on environmental challenges."
On the other hand, some states are eager to see more data centers, not
because they provide jobs (they provide high paying jobs, but few of them).
Data centers pay taxes. "States like North Carolina, South Carolina, and
Texas have lost their main industries, furniture and textiles. They want
your taxes. Although you don't provide many jobs, you're also easy on
servicesyou won't be a problem for the police or the schools. Some
of these states will provide incentives."
An ISPCON keynote speaker, Clarence E. Briggs III, CEO of Fayetteville,
N.C.-based webhost AIT, told
attendees that his company purchased a data center out of bankruptcy
for $36,000 and a promise to the local government to create 250 jobs,
invest $205 million, and stay in town for five years.
Asked about water for cooling, Bowman cited statistics from New
Jersey, where he lives. He said you cannot rely on constant water
delivery. "The state has 250 to 350 water main breaks each year. We
lose 8 wells each year to toxicity. When we drought, the wells are
limited. You need surface storage, and you can lose 600 gallons per
hour of surface storage to evaporation."
So, if you use water, plan ahead.
Asked about designed super high power rooms, he said that super rooms
can get super broke and land you in super trouble. Gas-based fire retardant
systems are great, but replacing the gas can be super expensive. "I'm
a fan of high ceilings," he said. Spread the heat, lower the risk.
End
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WSTA Data Center Seminar: Data Center Real Estate
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