All cooped up: Yahoo!'s novel green data center design

By | September 20, 2010, 10:00am PDT

Summary: Someone once said (I can’t remember who) that there are no new plots in literature. The same themes just get recycled over and over with a different characters and cultural norms driving the action. Well I guess the same thing must be true of industrial architecture. Although it may seem like a very odd choice, giant [...]

Someone once said (I can’t remember who) that there are no new plots in literature. The same themes just get recycled over and over with a different characters and cultural norms driving the action.

Well I guess the same thing must be true of industrial architecture. Although it may seem like a very odd choice, giant Internet search company Yahoo! is drawing on a very non-technical sort of building design — the chicken coop — as the inspiration for its latest data center facility in Lockport, N.Y.

The photo to the right provides a view of the basic building structure, which includes Yahoo!’s patent-pending Yahoo! Computing Coop design. The buildings that house the servers use the same long thin design as those buildings, which rely on the venting chimney system on the top to recirculate cool air and rely on free cooling. There are several 120-foot-by-60-foot buildings at the new Lockport facility, which boasts about 155,000 square foot in total.

Christina Page, director of energy and climate strategy for Yahoo!, says the Lockport facility should be able to take advantage of free cooling approximately 99 percent of the time to keep the facility at the optimal temperature for the servers to operate. The other 1 percent of the time when the weather is hot and humid, the company will use a direct evaporative cooling system to keep the building cool, she says.

Another factor behind this location choice for Yahoo!’s new data center was the hydropower available to energize the facility, which comes from New York Power Authority via the Niagara Falls. Yahoo! also was lucky enough to be able to win a $9.9 million sustainability Green IT grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to fund some of the construction, although Page says the company would have proceeded with the facility anyway.

Page admits that the Yahoo! Chicken Coop design is fairly radical. It definitely will work only in certain areas of the country where the weather is conducive. Overall, the data center will use about 40 percent less electricity and about 95 percent less water than data centers of a comparable capacity, according to Yahoo!’s fact shee about the new facility.

So, for perspective, the amount of power saved through the design could light up 300,000 compact fluorescent light bulbs for an entire year, while the amount of water being saved could provide enough drinking water for 200,000 for a year. Of course, that’s the theory, now we’ll have to see what happens, now that the new data center is powering all of Yahoo!’s services, including Mail, Messenger, Flickr, News, Sports and Finance.

“A lot of folks are watching to see what we are hoping to achieve,” Page says.

This is not an approach, however, that you could use to retrofit an existing facility. For that, Yahoo is drawing on a thermal cooling approach.

The new Lockport facility will have an average power usage effectiveness (PUE) ratio of 1.08, according to Page. That compares with an industry average ratio of 1.92, which is a figure that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency last updated in June 2010.

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Heather Clancy is an award-winning business journalist with a passion for green technology and corporate sustainability issues.

Disclosure

Heather Clancy

Writing publicly about what the high-tech industry is actually doing to help itself and the world get greener or more sustainable is one way I figure I can contribute more meaningfully to said effort. I am also a big OMG-kind-of-fan of smart leadership, which is why the goodly folks who publish this blog let me go on about this topic and why I am always on the hunt for forward-looking business management ideas.

My daily writing is focused on looking for topics for my blogs, GreenTech Pastures and Business Brains. I also write often about emerging technology trends such as mobile computing, unified communications and cloud computing. Occasionally, I will pop up at an industry conference in some sort of speaking capacity. In cases where a speaking engagement involves a sponsor that may be covered in this blog, that fact will be disclosed in coverage as appropriate.

My corporate writing work usually consists of crafting research white papers about some aspect of technology. In the event that my commentary (in written, audio or video form) mentions a company for which I have provided consulting advice, I will disclose that fact. However, there is no connection between these projects and the topics that I am covering in my blog.

Biography

Heather Clancy

Heather Clancy is an award-winning business journalist with a passion for green technology and corporate sustainability issues. Her articles have appeared in Entrepreneur, Fortune Small Business, The International Herald Tribune and The New York Times. In a past corporate life, Heather was editor of Computer Reseller News, where she was a featured speaker about everything from software as a service to IT security to mobile computing.

Heather started her journalism life as a business writer with United Press International in New York. She holds a B.A. in English literature from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, and has a thing for Lewis Carroll.

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I had a writing professor who said there were only 36 plots in literature, all being recycled. I've seen numbers as low as 7. My belief is that this is all an academic load....

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