Fill in your contact details below to discuss your needs and learn more about our Data centres.
Fill in your contact details below to discuss your needs and learn more about our Data centres.
Thank you for submitting your interest in learning more about our Data centres. A member of our team will be in touch to discuss your needs and provide more information about our solution.
Abel is a highly rated, fully refreshed, modern data centre in central Wellington. It's part of Datacom's Trans-Tasman interconnected data centre network that spans all four of Datacom’s New Zealand data centres and its two Australian co-location facilities.
The central Wellington site has been serving customers for over 20 years. We have recently invested NZ$14 million to upgrade and refresh the site, bringing it up to the standard required to meet the needs of modern computing infrastructure.
Security at the site has been fully upgraded to modern standards, with CCTV throughout and on all entrances. We keep visitor management module records, and have a secure mantrap for identity confirmation.
Security at the site has been fully upgraded to modern standards, with CCTV throughout and on all entrances. We keep visitor management module records, and have a secure mantrap for identity confirmation.
Our data centre team are on-site to help you 24/7, with skilled and experienced technicians available to help with everything from a physical device check to full rack installation services. Customers can access also access Abel 24/7 to work on their own equipment.
We are committed to telco and service provider neutrality for the lifetime of our facilities, so you can choose the provider that works best for your needs.
Abel is the Wellington region's most-certified data centre. Customers of Abel benefit from the assurance of the following certifications: PCI-DSS, ISAE NZ 3000, Uptime Institute M&O stamp of approval, ISO/IEC 27001:2013, and GDPR. We also operate Abel to the following standards: 2011 ASHRAE thermal guidelines A1 allowable range, ANSI/ISA 71.04-2013 G1 – Mild, and ISO 14644-1 Class 8.
Abel makes use of the region’s cooler temperatures by way of dry-stack air-cooling technology to support the process coolers. The facility is designed to operate at a PUE of 1.5 or better.
Abel is also safeguarded with a 2N power system and 2N UPS configuration to maintain an uninterrupted power supply. Backed up with on-site diesel fuel storage capacity of at least 48 hours at generator full load. Fuel polishing systems ensure the highest quality of fuel is available.
Abel is protected in the case of fire with a VESDA aspirating smoke detection system. A ProInert gas flood fire suppression system is deployed throughout the data floors. Direct connections with the local fire brigade are in place. Other fire suppression systems include mist suppression system and traditional sprinkler systems. The data centre is designed in accordance with AS/NZS 1170.0:2002 IL3.
The refresh included replacing the entire power system and upgrading security, cooling, and the data floor spaces to provide the same level of resilience as our Auckland, Hamilton, and Christchurch data centres and lifting the facility to a rated-three standard.
The brand-new data floor spaces offer our full suite of rack products from quarter racks up to 48RU racks. Abel also offers customers 100 per cent power, cooling, and security service-level agreements.
Datacom's customers span industries including cloud and telecommunication providers, enterprise companies, government departments, major banks and financial organisations, and a range of IT service providers
Abel is now a rated-three facility, and the certifications and compliance the site has achieved include ISO27001, ISAE3000, PCI-DSS, and the general data protection regulation (GDPR). The Uptime Institute Management and Operations (Uptime Institute M&O) has also given their stamp of approval.
First, we need to cover the difference between an on-premise data centre and a collocated data centre. Sometimes “colocated” data centres are referred to as “hosted” data centres.
On-premise data centre: Where you have your own mini data centre, with servers and equipment housed within your own office building or a separate facility that you own and manage. You're responsible for everything, from buying the equipment to maintaining the physical space and security.
Colocated data centre: Renting a space within a data centre facility owned by a third-party provider. You house your own servers and equipment, but the provider takes care of the building, security, power, cooling and access to internet/cloud connectivity. We think of it like renting an apartment for your servers in a building specifically designed for data storage.
Colocation is like renting an apartment for your servers in a building designed for IT equipment storage. You provide your own IT equipment (servers, storage, firewall) and software, and the colocation provider takes care of the physical facility, including:
Power and cooling
Security (physical access)
Network connectivity options
Datacom's expertise focuses on secure colocation data centres, but here is an explanation of what Data Centre as a Service is: Think of Data Centre as a Service (DCaaS) as a fully furnished apartment with utilities included. In addition to the physical space and security provided by colocation, DCaaS offers:
Hardware: the DCaaS provider rents you servers, storage and networking equipment.
Software: the DCaaS provider may offer pre-installed operating systems, virtualisation software, or managed services for your applications.
Management: DCaaS providers handle most of the ongoing maintenance and management of your IT infrastructure.
DCaaS is an extension of colocation data centres, but provides the hardware, maintenance and energy as well as the physical space.
Datacom recommends anyone with their own IT equipment stored on premise should talk to us about moving it to a secure colocated data centre.