Paratus aims to create a one-stop shop for businesses of all sizes to compete at world-class levels.
Paratus aims to create a one-stop shop for businesses of all sizes to compete at world-class levels.

Armada – first carrier-neutral data centre (DC) for Namibia

Resilient infrastructure and connectivity are at the forefront in Africa
The new Paratus Namibia Data Centre (DC), Armada, opens in Windhoek in August 2022, propelling the Namibian economy into the era of carrier-neutral DC offerings.
For the first time, colocation clients will have the freedom of choice as well as access to world-class infrastructure hosting services. Any client hosting within the facility will be able to select which telecommunications provider they want to use.
A colocation facility, or colo, is a data centre facility in which a business can rent space for servers and other computing hardware.
Schalk Erasmus, chief operations officer of the Paratus Group, said that Armada is a one of a kind and a one-stop shop for businesses of all sizes to compete at world-class levels.
"With 99.98% uptime, backed by the most sophisticated technologies – including multiple solar banks – it provides unique assurances. The resilience we offer at Armada is unmatched in Namibia. We have invested heavily and have appointed the best designers and engineers to make Armada the most secure, environmentally friendly, and efficient facility in the country. Armada is the archetype of modern technology at work. Effectively, Armada will provide Namibian businesses with the opportunity to participate in the fourth industrial revolution (4IR)," he said.
The new purpose-built facility will enable businesses to host information communication technology (ICT) infrastructure, providing 24/7 access in a secure and world-class Tier III equivalent DC. Armada has been designed to exact and precise standards, leveraging the latest physical and virtual security and the highest possible uptime. The DC will also offer businesses a colocation solution with a resilient infrastructure environment for clients to host their equipment in, thereby minimising IT capital expenditure and operating costs associated with on-premises hosting and management.
Moving ICT equipment off-site to a fully secured facility offers resilience in connectivity, power, cooling, and features fire suppression and security capabilities that traditional onsite set-ups might struggle to achieve economically.
Erasmus underlined that "Paratus has two DCs in Angola and another in Zambia, and with Armada, we are raising the bar again.

"This is in line with our main objective of transforming Africa through exceptional digital infrastructure. We’re helping to ‘unlimit’ the future."
Offering colocation services, 24/7 quality connections for local and multinational businesses, together with a very sophisticated range of digital and aligned services, Paratus Namibia is helping local and international businesses in the region to perform at a new and unlimited level and be fully digitally fit for that purpose.
The carrier-neutral facility will offer various colocation services, from half-cabinets to multi-tenant rows and private cages.
Key features of the facility include:
• 2-megawatt power capacity (Phase 2)
• Diverse A&B utility power supply (Phase 2)
• Dedicated generators - per A&B feed, for comprehensive resilience and 72-hour fuel autonomy
• Diverse power-feed design throughout from utility to cabinet level
• Fully inter-resilient 500 kVA UPSs per feed (A&B) dedicated to the data centre
• Separate utilities UPS to ensure electrical autonomy
• Dual UPS feeds per cabinet to deliver up to 3.3kVA
• Cold aisle containment and inter-resilient CRAC cooling units at N+1
• Multiple diverse carrier routes with separate meet-me-rooms (A&B), as well as access to tower across diverse infrastructure from fibre to microwave
• Direct link to the new Equiano cable and CLS in Swakopmund
• Access to Paratus backbone network linking multinational customers to the Paratus data centres in Angola and Zambia

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Namibian Sun 2024-11-24

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