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Data Center and Lab Best Practice Guides

Data Center and Lab Best Practice Guides

San Francisco, California
United States
S&T Data Centers

Introba (formerly Integral Group), in conjunction with PG&E and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, created these comprehensive guidelines for data center design.

Data centers can consume 25 to 50 times as much electricity as standard office spaces. With such large power consumption, they are prime targets for energy-efficient design measures that can save money and reduce electricity use. However, the critical nature of data center loads elevates many design criteria — chiefly reliability and high power density capacity – far above efficiency. Short design cycles often leave little time to fully assess efficient design opportunities or first consider the cost versus life cycle cost issues. This process can lead to designs that are scaled-up versions of standard office space approaches or that re-use strategies and specifications that worked “good enough” in the past without regard for energy performance.

The team created Data Center Design Guidelines to provide viable alternatives to inefficient building practices. Based on benchmark measurements of operating data centers and input from practicing designers and operators, the team provided Design Guidelines as a set of efficient baseline design approaches for data center systems and, in many cases, can also be used to identify cost-effective saving opportunities in operating facilities. No design guide can offer ‘the one correct way to design a data center, but the Design Guidelines offer efficient design suggestions that provide efficiency benefits in various data center design situations. In some areas, the team also identified promising technologies for possible future design consideration.

Data center design is a relatively new field that houses a dynamic and evolving technology. The most efficient and effective data center designs use relatively new design fundamentals to create the required high energy density, high-reliability environment. This document captures many of the new ‘standard’ approaches used as a starting point by successful and efficient data centers.

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