QUESTION: Who does a Fortune 500 Company turn to when they want to deliver their first mega Data Centre outside the United States? ANSWER: Mercury
Microsoft has opened a new "mega datacentre" in west Dublin to support growing demand for online services. The centre is part of the company's strategy to build its cloud computing capacity and network infrastructure to meet the demand generated from its Online, Live, and Cloud services.
Mercury Engineering executed the complete electrical, fiber optic and copper cabling infrastructure on this mega 303,000 square-foot facility which represented an overall investment of $500 million. Speaking at the centre's official opening, Taoiseach Brian Cowen said the economy needed dynamic, innovative companies to help rebuild the economy.
"We envisage a high-value, export-led economy with companies creating the products and services of tomorrow and providing high quality employment for our people,” he said.


The data centre is the next evolutionary step in Microsoft’s commitment to thoughtfully building its cloud computing capacity and network infrastructure throughout the region to meet the demand generated from its Online, Live Services and Cloud Services, such as Bing, Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite, Windows Live, and the Azure Services Platform.
“The opening of the data centre is a milestone in our ongoing investment in Europe and provides the critical infrastructure to support the delivery of our next generation of online services for both businesses and consumers. This facility will play a central role in our promise to deliver computing experiences that seamlessly connect people, data, devices and applications across the digital workstyle and lifestyle – a vision we call Software plus Services,” said Jean-Philippe Courtois, president, Microsoft International.

The data centre – one of the largest construction projects in the Republic of Ireland over last 12 months – has taken approximately one million man-hours to complete and involved a workforce close to 2,100 at peak. The facility covers 303,000 square feet and can generate up to 5.4 megawatts of critical power, with the potential to expand to a total of 22.2 megawatts of critical power.
Source: Irish Times Newspaper and DataCentreDynamics Focus Magazine Issue 6




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