Construction productivity is a problem. How bad? Check out this graph.
Shouldn't this be a problem that the data center construction industry can solve?
Your Custom Text Here
Construction productivity is a problem. How bad? Check out this graph.
Shouldn't this be a problem that the data center construction industry can solve?
Winston Churchill is know for a well known quote.
Data Centers look like warehouses from the outside. Their efficient and over time determined as the lowest cost way to house the equipment for Internet Services. Just like any other commercial building design.
Like Winston Churchill says "we shape our buildings and afterwards our buildings shape us."
What happens if you are focused on a creative collaborative team who would run a data center. Should the data center be designed differently?
An example of different is Pixar's headquarters covered by Buzzfeed.
The beating heart of the campus — and of Pixar itself — is the two-story Steve Jobs Building that provides a tremendous 218,000 square feet of space for roughly 700 people to work, eat, and play. The name is not just an honorific to the late Jobs, who bought the company from LucasArts in 1986 and served as its Chairman and then CEO until it was purchased by Disney in 2006. In a very real sense, the building is Steve Jobs.
“Since Steve didn’t actually make our movies, the building itself became his project,” says company President Ed Catmull, one of Pixar’s co-founders with John Lasetter. “This is the only building that Steve ever designed and built and carried through [with finishing] it.”
How many data centers look all the same? Data halls, electrical rooms, mechanical rooms, and last the office space.
I had heard that Digital Realty's David Schirmacher had a new role as SVP of Design and Construction last week and was waiting for public disclosure. David has updated his LinkedIn profile.
Before David joined Digital we had many long conversations about the data center industry. We now have much fewer, but our conversations had lasting value and it is a good move for David and Digital. David used to run Design and Construction at Goldman Sachs so this is not a new role for him.
There are many ideas in my head of how Digital could be changing how it designs, constructs and operates its data centers, and I have a feeling it is going to be based on some of the ideas David and I used to talk about.
Sometimes you can learn from mistakes. If you are an engineer, so much of what you know works is from the things that didn't. Delawarenonline reports on the suit filed between executives at The Data Centers LLC.
Some of the vendors have unpaid invoices.
WSJ has a post on tax incentives for Facebook in Iowa, but the coolest thing is this graphic showing data centers in a range of states which supports the story on state tax incentives.
This quote captures one of the main reasons why states compete for the big players to build.