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April 6th, 2007 - News Article

Secure structure

Three of the seven Perimeter Technology co-owners — Terry Morrison (left), Stan Chase and Brad Thomas — gather near new telecommunications equipment Thursday during the grand opening of the company’s renovated facility in the Brady District.
 
 
By ROBERT EVATT World Staff Writer
4/6/2007

Firm updates building for data storage

It took an additional $2 million in renovations over the last two years to an already heavily modified building, but Perimeter Technology has finished its Tulsa network operations center.

The end result at 322 E. Archer St. is one of the safest and most secure information technology centers in the state, said John Parsons, president of Oklahoma City-based Perimeter.

"It's truly a one-of-a-kind facility for this region of the country," he said.

The company employs four peo ple at the 37,000-square-foot building but plans to expand to about a dozen over the next 20 months as it gains clients, officials said.

Perimeter purchased the building in May 2005 for $1.7 million, Parsons said.

The facility began life as an ice house in the 1920s, so it has 13-inch-thick walls. Former telecommunications giant Genuity leased the building in 2001 and made more than $5 million in renovations to transform it into a data center.

Some of the changes included multiple in-house power plants with capacity reaching multiple megawatts, hundreds of tons of cooling capacity, an internal generator with a 4,000-gallon diesel fuel tank and, of course, miles of fiber-optic cable.

"Archer Street now has more fiber buried beneath and beside it than any other single street in the state," Parsons said.

Genuity filed for bankruptcy in 2003 and left the building, leaving behind all the new equipment. Some months later, Parsons explored the possibility of expanding into Tulsa and decided the building was ideal for Perimeter's needs.

Perimeter now stores and ser vices primary or secondary systems for more than 30 clients, and Parsons said he's bullish about persuading more companies to outsource their data storage.

"Companies storing their own data is like the banking industry 150 years ago," he said. "Back then, each company kept cash in the back of their business, which was much more inefficient than putting it in a bank."

Perimeter's additional modifications to the building include more technological infrastructure and disaster recovery office space, which would allow critical employees of clients to resume work in the event of a disaster at the primary location.

The facility also has state-of-the-art security systems and a dual-interlock dry pipe fire suppression system, which only sprays water in the immediate area where extreme heat is detected.

 

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