Containers and
data center halls are stacked in 1m sq ft of underground corridors
A new data
center with 75 underground halls is set to open in Måløy Norway in August 2016
– with owners Lefdal claiming it will be the biggest in Europe.
The Lefdal Mine
Datacenter is being built in the site of an old mineral excavation in the Sogn
og Fjordane region between the west Norwegian ports of Måløy and Nordfjordeid.
Once fully built it could potentially offer 120,00 square meters (1.3m sq ft)
of space, much of it provided in containers shipped by Rittal.
Lefdal Mine
cutaway view
Source: Lefdal
Mine Datacenter
Powered and cooled by water
Like its
Norwegian neighbor, the Green
Mountain facility at Stavanger, the Lefdal facility is built into a mountain, and
situated within 100 metres of a deep fjord. This will give the facility access
to free sea-water cooling systems and CO2-neutral energy sources from a variety
of local hydroelectric generators.
Lefdal Mine
will largely consist of containers parked in underground “streets” (former mine
workings). The containers will be stacked up to three deep on each side of the
street, and delivered through under ground roads that can accomodate an
articulated truck.
There will also
be three floors of traditional data center space, where more usual racks and
cabinets can be installed. Both of these areas will connect to the same
sea-water cooling and power distribution systems, as well as fiber connectivity
from multiple operators.
The port of
Måløy has good road network and shipping links, with access to fiber networks
and two local airports. With its home in a heavily industrialised area, the
facility will have good comms, logistics and technical skill bases, said Lefdal
chairman Egil Skibenes. The chambers of the data center will be connected by
the facility’s own underground road network. Each of the six levels of the old
mine site will be connected by a central access road providing direct access to
vacant chambers.
IBM and Rittal dig in
IBM was the
project’s first partner, and will move in when the facility goes live, offering
resiliency and backup services to its customers, according to Lefdal. There is
also a strong partnership with Rittal, whose data center containers are very much
in evidence in the site’s photos and diagrams. Rittal’s parent, the
Germany-based Freidhelm Loh Group, has signed a lease agreement, and Rittal
will supply containers and infrastructure for the white space areas.
A fully
customized container can be fitted-out, shipped to Lefdal, hooked up and
brought online in six to eight weeks, Lefdal’s marketing director Mats
Andersson told DatacenterDynamics. Given that containers are a standard
shape, Andersson said that customers wanting to work with other container
vendors could do so, though everyone in the underground streets has to take the
infrastructure, which will be Tier III certified, including power and cooling.
The economies
of scale, security and access to natural cooling and hydroelectric power will be
major assets to European clients, said Skibenes. Building out a data center
into a previously excavated site has saved between 30 and 60 per cent of the
costs of a typical Tier III data center construction, he said.
Others poured
cold water on the idea, however. Andrew Jay, head of data centers for real
estate firm CBRE, said: “It’s a great location, cheap power, it’s green and
cool. But nobody is going to compromise a mission critical operation to save a
few quid on their power bill. Yes, it makes sense from an engineering
perspective. But not from a commercial perspective. The latency and data
sovereignty would put most people off. And the fact that you need two plane
journeys to get there.”
Jay admitted
there was a chance of success: “Having said that, the first rule of data
centers is there are no rules. Maybe companies with a global presence, that are
under scrutiny from Greenpeace, might consider it. But there aren’t many of
them.”
Apart from IBM
and Friedhelm Loh, there are no other clients announced as yet. According to
Lefdal marketing director Mats Andersson, the company will launch a series of
channel and customer initiatives in the UK in autumn.
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