27 March 2010
12 March 2010
Terminal Commerce Building's power supply

a view from the backside of the complex, and shows some of the
electrical infrastructure needed to keep the data center running.
22 February 2010
14 February 2010
data centers taking over New Jersey?
The New York Times real estate section had a piece by this past week by Jotham Sederstrom: North Jersey Finds Popularity as Home for Data Centers. In this down economy, on one of the few growing real estate markets is in the construction of data centers. In New Jersey two million square feet of data center space is in some stage of construction. Multiply that by average costs of $1,200 per square feet, and you have $2.4 billion dollars going into this industry in New Jersey alone. The reason northern New Jersey is quickly becoming home to this industry is its close proximity to New York City, but without the immense real estate costs associated with building in the city itself. To quote the article at length:
"Data center providers and industry analysts said that North Jersey was an ideal location for the data needs of New York City’s large financial services industry. In a business that does countless transactions in a second, a greater distance would add milliseconds to every action taken online, but if the center is situated too close to Manhattan, construction costs can soar. Michael Boccardi, chief executive of Cervalis, a 10-year-old data center provider with facilities in Connecticut and New York State, said his company chose a site in Passaic County for its first New Jersey facility for those reasons.
“We felt that we wanted to be close but not too close, but still within that core 25-mile vicinity of New York City,” Mr. Boccardi said of the 150,000-square-foot operation, which he said would open by the end of the month and accommodate many of the financial services firms that were affected by Sept. 11."
That financial service firms located in lower Manhattan will soon exist partially in north Jersey is a strange element of contemporary, digital urbanism: the urban is not just connected to the suburban Passaic County through workers commuting into New York City, but also through the instantaneous, continual transmission of data back and forth between the offices full of workers but little computer equipment, and the data center, full of equipment but very few employees.
View Larger Map
Above is the satellite map of the location of 5851 Westside Avenue, North Bergen that the Times article focuses on. It is just two miles west of the Hudson River, across a bit of marshland from the New Jersey Turnpike. As urban society becomes more and more digital, the data that these actions produce has to be stored somewhere, often in places like this one.
"Data center providers and industry analysts said that North Jersey was an ideal location for the data needs of New York City’s large financial services industry. In a business that does countless transactions in a second, a greater distance would add milliseconds to every action taken online, but if the center is situated too close to Manhattan, construction costs can soar. Michael Boccardi, chief executive of Cervalis, a 10-year-old data center provider with facilities in Connecticut and New York State, said his company chose a site in Passaic County for its first New Jersey facility for those reasons.
“We felt that we wanted to be close but not too close, but still within that core 25-mile vicinity of New York City,” Mr. Boccardi said of the 150,000-square-foot operation, which he said would open by the end of the month and accommodate many of the financial services firms that were affected by Sept. 11."
That financial service firms located in lower Manhattan will soon exist partially in north Jersey is a strange element of contemporary, digital urbanism: the urban is not just connected to the suburban Passaic County through workers commuting into New York City, but also through the instantaneous, continual transmission of data back and forth between the offices full of workers but little computer equipment, and the data center, full of equipment but very few employees.
View Larger Map
Above is the satellite map of the location of 5851 Westside Avenue, North Bergen that the Times article focuses on. It is just two miles west of the Hudson River, across a bit of marshland from the New Jersey Turnpike. As urban society becomes more and more digital, the data that these actions produce has to be stored somewhere, often in places like this one.
06 February 2010
05 February 2010
The Infinity, 365 Main, and the USPS Embarcadero Postal Center
photo by Author. downtown San Francisco, January 2010.
Here is a pretty interesting urban juxtaposition to be found in downtown San Francisco. On the 300 block of Main Street, between Folsom and Harrison, there is a luxury condo complex at 333 Main called The Infinity, the original and namesake 365 Main data center at 365 Main, and across the street, the Embarcadero Postal Center, which is entered around the corner at 226 Harrison. The luxury condos provide downtown living for some agents of gentrification, 365 Main houses a portion of the the Internet, and the USPS facility organizes then delivers non-electronic mail. This situation is representative of 21st century San Francisco's digital city. It is a mixture of high-tech economy, housing that is out of reach for much if not most of the city's populace, and an analog holdout in the form of the Postal Service. While it is likely that someone who works at 365 Main lives at The Infinity, I would be surprised if anyone at the USPS facility could afford to live there.
By the way, if anyone walks by 365 Main to take a picture of the building, be prepared for security to come out and tell you that you cannot photograph it, even if you are on the public sidewalk, which San Francisco defines as such: "Public right-of-way is defined as all City roadways and sidewalks bordered by private properties, (improved and un-improved.)" Source
Here is a pretty interesting urban juxtaposition to be found in downtown San Francisco. On the 300 block of Main Street, between Folsom and Harrison, there is a luxury condo complex at 333 Main called The Infinity, the original and namesake 365 Main data center at 365 Main, and across the street, the Embarcadero Postal Center, which is entered around the corner at 226 Harrison. The luxury condos provide downtown living for some agents of gentrification, 365 Main houses a portion of the the Internet, and the USPS facility organizes then delivers non-electronic mail. This situation is representative of 21st century San Francisco's digital city. It is a mixture of high-tech economy, housing that is out of reach for much if not most of the city's populace, and an analog holdout in the form of the Postal Service. While it is likely that someone who works at 365 Main lives at The Infinity, I would be surprised if anyone at the USPS facility could afford to live there.
By the way, if anyone walks by 365 Main to take a picture of the building, be prepared for security to come out and tell you that you cannot photograph it, even if you are on the public sidewalk, which San Francisco defines as such: "Public right-of-way is defined as all City roadways and sidewalks bordered by private properties, (improved and un-improved.)" Source
02 February 2010
23 January 2010
lots of wires

I can see fiber optic cabling, a petroleum pipeline, some electricity equipment in the middle-ground of the photo, and barbed wire above the chain-link fence.
14 January 2010
wires and tubes: submarine fiber-optic cable journalism from Wired Magazine
An old MCI do-not-dig-here marker for a fiber-optic cable laid alongside the railroad tracks in Berkeley, California. Photo by author.
Way back in 1996, when the Internet was yet to be found in our pockets and was likely accessed by dial-up modems, the sci-fi/cyberpunk/etc writer Neal Stephenson (who has a Bachelors in Geography from Boston University according to Wikipedia) wrote what has to be one of the longest pieces Wired has published--62 pages formatted to print on standard, 8.5'' x 11'' printer paper--about the laying of what was then the longest wire in the world, connecting Europe with East Asia and points in between. The writing is great and very informative. Stephenson calls himself a "hacker tourist" as a way to circumvent both journalistic standards and scholarly language, creating a picture of what it takes, or took in 1996, to lay the fiber-optic infrastructure that allows the Internet to function around the globe. In the intervening 14 years, the amount of submarine cables have increased tremendously. Edward Malecki published an article on the subject in the Annals of the AAG a year ago, and yet that article, while useful, does not get at the on-the-ground reality of what it takes to lay and maintain the cables in the way Stephenson's essay does. "Mother Earth Mother Board" is archived at Wired's website and is free to access. I am working my way through it now and am thoroughly enjoying it.
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