Photos: Five unusual data centres

Hydrogen-fuelled, underground and bundled in a shipping containerÂ…

By Gemma Simpson, 25 July 2007 13:48

Data centres are big business, and as well as the usual anonymous buildings on the edge of town silicon.com has visited some more unusual locations as the industry develops new ways of coping with demand.

For example, managed services provider Centrinet has what it claims is the UK's first data centre with zero carbon emissions.

The data centre was built 100 metres underground in a former RAF radar station in the Lincolnshire countryside. Pictured is the view down into the so-called Smartbunker.

The zero-carbon claim refers to energy - all the power the data centre uses comes from UK-based wind farms. Click to see the more of the zero-carbon subterranean centre.

Photo credit: Gemma Simpson

Comments

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  1. 1. Charles Smith

    You should have a look at the C02 cooling system for Data Centres. It is very impressive in terms of cooling capability. Query cost though.

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