Data centers have always been secure, tightly controlled facilities,  but 9/11 brought about changes that pushed security and physical  protections to even higher levels.
Data centers today,  particularly those serving as colocation facilities, are more likely to  have multiple points of security that may include physical barriers such  as crash-resistant fences and high-tech defenses such as biometric  identification systems.
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It's  less likely today that backup and recovery data centers will be built  near one another. And new data centers are more likely to be built  outside of urban areas.
"Data center designers have always been  mindful of security concerns," said Tad Davies, an executive vice  president at Bick Group, an IT services provider whose work includes  data center design. "What 9/11 caused us to do is think broader and on a  massive scale."
Davies said he knows of one company that  relocated its data center to a site that was within a four-hour drive of  its backup data centers. The reason: It wanted to be certain that its  IT staff could easily reach the facility by car in the event that air  transportation was shut down, which is what happened on Sept. 11, 2001.
Kris  Domich, who is the principal data center consultant at Dimension Data,  an IT services provider, said that 9/11 helped increased the acceptable  distance between primary and secondary locations. Instead of having the  data centers within a relatively quick drive, minimum distances can  range between 100 and 1,000 miles or more.
The events of 9/11  also prompted private companies and government agencies to question  whether data centers should be located in urban areas. The attacks,  Domich said, prompted executives to ask, "Why do we have the data center  here, and do we need to have the data center here?"
There are  other factors that influence where enterprises choose to build data  centers, especially energy costs and concerns about natural disasters.  But there are exceptions to everything. While companies like Apple and  Google have built new data centers in relatively rural locations, Microsoft has opened a major data center in Chicago.
Ken  Brill, founder of the Uptime Institute, said 9/11 revealed that many  data centers of the major financial services companies were in locations  that could not be easily secured. "The best defense remains site  selection," Brill said. "Having acres of surrounding land is the best  defense."
"The military uses 159 [feet] as the minimum separation  between the outside walls of critical buildings and areas of public  access," Brill said. "If this criterion were enforced in the private  sector, tens of billions [of dollars] in data center investments would  become obsolete overnight."
One example of the move toward stronger data center fortifications is the facility that NYSE Euronext recently opened  in New Jersey. Located on a 28-acre site, it has a number of defenses,  including a moat that protects part of the 400,000-square-foot complex.
Domich said that the need for stronger defenses has helped commercial  data center providers, which have typically put a lot of focus on security.
One  such firm is Vantage Data Centers in Santa Clara, Calif., which leases  out data center space in a complex located on an 18-acre campus. Its  facility is approximately 310,000 square feet.
Vantage CEO Jim  Trout says the facility is surrounded by an eight foot-tall fence  capable of stopping a car. Beginning with the gate, there are as many as  seven points in the facility where visitors are checked. There are  guards, biometric fingerprint identification systems, mantraps and  cameras that all serve to limit access to the facility and keep track of  visitors.
The facility also has redundant systems, including  redundant electrical capacity, so if one system gets knocked out there's  a backup to take its place, said Trout.
"There is no question," said Trout, that 9/11 affected the way data centers are secured.
nb : infoworld
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13/09/11
How 9/11 changed data centers
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