UnitedLayer’s San Francisco data center is located at 200 Paul Ave, San Francisco, CA 94124. The data center is outside the floodplain and is seismic zone 4 construction. The facility is located in one of the premier carrier hotels in San Francisco. The data center is a Tier III infrastructure facility.
UnitedLayer offers the flexible colocation options through half and full cabinet, quarter cabinet, 1U/2U/3U space, and customized caged space with mesh doors and individual locks. The data center provides 32,000 square feet of space and provides raised floor for the efficient airflow and subfloor cable management. The facility is regularly audited in accordance with SSAE 16 Type II requirements, and is a HIPAA and PCI compliant facility. The data center provides the state of the art security with perimeter security, 24x7x365 security guards, motion detectors cameras monitoring with recording, and biometric scan and key card access. The data center uses state of the fire suppression system for any fire spark.
San Francisco data center is a reliable and fault tolerant N+1 power infrastructure that is concurrently maintainable. The data center delivers AC and DC power in multiple 10A, 20A, and 30A circuits at 120V or 208V. The entire critical power infrastructure is protected by N+1 UPS system that is backed by redundant diesel generators in N+1 configuration on the loss of utility power. The diverse power is delivered in A+B configurations through APC PDUs. The data center supports high power density of 150 watts per square feet or 10 kW per cabinet. The cooling and humidity in the data center is controlled through multiple CRAC units in N+1 configuration in cold aisle containment design.
UnitedLayer’s 200 Paul Ave data center is a carrier neutral facility with connectivity to multiple Tier I providers. The facility offers direct connections to Tier I transit provider via Meet-Me-Room, and provides redundant 10Gb infrastructure. 24x7x365 NOC engineers provides the technical support service, and remote hands services such as power cycling and rebooting servers, swapping backup tapes, hardware installation, and cabling installation or modifications.