VEGAS INC Magazine - Latest Las Vegas business news, features and commentaries about gaming, tourism, real estate and more
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IN BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY SWITCH UNVEILS PLANS FOR 300,000-SQUARE-FOOT EXPANSION By Conor Shine staff writer Las Vegas technology company Switch has announced plans to build a new 300,000-square-foot data center campus in the northwest valley, enabling the company to offer cutting- edge data storage solutions to its roster of Fortune 500 and technology clients. Switch currently operates two data center campuses in Las Vegas where it provides physical security, power and cooling, for thousands of racks of servers owned and operated by its clients, which include eBay, Zappos and the U.S. government. Switch owns a fiber-optic network centered in Las Vegas that connects with the networks of more than two dozen major Internet providers. It provides companies unparalleled connectivity to access and transmit their data housed at Switch's physical locations. The construction of the new facility, which Switch has dubbed its North Las Vegas Campus, will coincide with an expansion at Switch's west campus, located off Decatur Boulevard near Interstate 215. Construction began in October on that project, which is expected to cost about $400 million. It is the largest active building project in the state and will create about 3,000 construction jobs and hundreds of permanent jobs. Jason Mendenhall, Switch's executive vice president of cloud computing, said construction of the north campus would be similar in scope to the $400 million expansion, but the exact cost or number of jobs to be created hadn't been calculated. The new campus, planned for a site near Cheyenne Avenue and Buffalo Drive, will allow the company to create an "active-active" system that will help COURTESY EXPANDING: Technology company Switch operates two data center campuses in Las Vegas and is building another in the northwest part of the city. "Even though the data center is up 100 make sure its customers' operations never go offline, Mendenhall says. Switch already offers a 100 percent uptime guarantee that its servers not go offline due to lack of power or connectivity. But the software and applications run by companies on the servers at Switch's facilities can still experience errors and outages, which the "active-active" system is designed to prevent, he said. percent of the time, the code or software might have an issue," Mendenhall said. "It's different than having a backup. Active-active assumes you have two fully live systems running that are replicating in real time. If there's a breakdown in one, the other one is ready to fill in." Switch's unique fiber-optic infrastructure and ties with national and international companies has generated talk about the potential Switch might play in helping diversify Las Vegas' economy. Mendenhall said the new campus would allow Switch to implement innovative new technology that would continue to attract businesses. "It's going to add value to our existing customers, and it's also going to be able to draw other enterprise customers to the area," he said. | 12 DECEMBER 2011 | 11

