More Pictures inside Google Data Center - Networking Room

We've all been in plenty of data centers, but many haven't and they will get excited seeing these pictures inside google.

You can see these pictures at this url http://www.google.com/green/storyofsend/desktop/#/clear-instructions/overlay/inside-networking

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Google's servers are here. http://www.google.com/green/storyofsend/desktop/#/hard-working-machines/overlay/our-servers

 

Climate-change skeptic makes PR mistakes, loses funding

The #1 rule of any environmental group, even if it is anti-climate change is you will need to keep the money coming in.

The Economist reports on The Heartland Institute making some bad moves.

THE Heartland Institute, the world’s most prominent think-tank promoting scepticism about man-made climate change, is getting a lot of heat. In recent weeks it has lost an estimated $825,000 in expected donations, a couple of directors and almost its entire branch in Washington, DC. At its annual shindig in Chicago this week, the institute’s president, Joseph Bast, said Heartland had “discovered who our real friends are.” The 100-odd guests who failed to show up for the “7th Climate Conference” were not among them.

The Heartland made a bad move.

Worse ensued early this month after the institute put up a digital billboard in Chicago that linked belief in global warming to madness and terrorism. It depicted the “Unabomber”, a mass-murderer called Ted Kaczynski, with the slogan, “I still believe in Global Warming. Do you?” The offending sign lasted only for a day. But PepsiCo, BB&T bank and Eli Lilly, a pharma company, are among donors that announced the end of their support.

Keep in mind whenever you see an environmental group take action, they are doing the things that keeps the money coming in.  If they don't, they'll be in a defensive position like The Heartland.

Demonstration of what could be done with information sharing, a path to lower costs and less waste

Data Centers almost never share information on its operations.  This is what hospitals used to be like.  But, more and more hospitals are sharing information so they gain insight into best practices.

Seattletimes has an AP article that discusses a discovery on better procedures for knee surgery.

The hospital is part of a national collaborative that's analyzing a range of high-volume, high-cost medical procedures and conditions to see which approaches result in the best outcomes and the lowest costs. Its findings on knee replacements were published last week, but several of the health systems already have made changes based on the results.

For example, Dartmouth-Hitchcock is considering having a dedicated team of anesthesiologists, nurses and technicians assigned to knee replacements after seeing that another hospital with such a team had the shortest average operating time, which is associated with fewer complications.

Wouldn't it be great if data centers could share its procedures and results.  Why is it so secret to discuss maintenance operations on power and cooling equipment?

Modular Data Center is not a guarantee of less cost, time, waste

Some Modular Data Center vendors would lead you to believe that a modular design is a guarantee to lower cost, less time to build, and reduces waste.

Modular uses Prefab construction ideas.  An article written by Postgreen Home's President Chad Ludeman provides some details on what is possible in home construction using Prefab.  The perspective given is prefab used in a modern home.  

Some nuggets that will get you thinking.

Prefab manufacturers and resellers will tell you that prefab is cheaper because of the time and labor savings, but let’s list the key factors that actually make prefab more expensive than site built:

  • Manufacturing Facility Overhead – Prefab manufacturers work in buildings with support staff above and beyond those actually building the houses. They also have facility costs such as equipment, utilities and maintenance … Site built homes, built by most residential builders, don’t have any of these.
  • Manufacturing Company Profit – These manufacturers are making at least as much profit as the average general contractor and often more.  The majority of cost savings resulting from the prefab manufacturing process stays in the pockets of the manufacturer.
  • Delivery, Setting, and Crane Fees - These can easily run $10K per house (cranes aren’t cheap) and can be significantly more if the distance from manufacturer to site is large.  Most manufacturers also dictate who the labor crew will be, and often they won’t be the best value available.
  • Architect or Reseller Fees – In some cases the fees charged by the architect providing the prefab can run as high as $30,000 or more.  Even in cases where no additional site customization or design work is needed, a substantial fee will still be added by the architect or reseller.
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Less Waste. Since prefab is built in a factory they claim to create much less waste by setting aside their scrap and reusing it in other projects.  What they do not often advertise is that their structures use 20% – 30% more raw materials than stick-built homes in order to withstand transportation.  That’s no small figure in my book, especially considering that even if there is waste on-site with stick-built homes you can now easily hire a waste removal company that will recycle 90%+ of your construction waste.
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I recently walked through a delivered prefab with the owner and he offered me pallets of free OSB because he had so much extra and had no idea what he was going to do with it.  I’m sure every prefab company is not this sloppy, but it is another indication of waste in an industry claiming extreme efficiency.
I have some friends who are not believers in containers and they say they can stick build a data center cheaper than containers.  How?  They have ideas like this.
Quality Stock Plans
The first place to start when trying to streamline and cut costs from any building project is with high-quality building plans from qualified architects.  If every detail down to the last sheet of drywall and bucket of paint is nailed down and proven out in each set of plans, it becomes much easier for a GC to provide the best price from his crew and any subcontractors that are hired for the job.  This can not be undervalued, since any uncertainty on the part of those bidding on the project will instantly up the quotes.  This is where prefab gets most of the efficiency gains in their process, by building exactly the same home over and over.  They know exactly how much material and how much labor goes into each home plan in their library of options.

 If you don't agree with this author you can rebuttals here.

To Conclude . . . Finally

There are many amazing things being done in prefab, and if it weren’t for my self-imposed ban on mentioning specific companies and architects, I could name a bunch that I personally admire.  However, there are also a large number of misconceptions about the benefits of prefab that need to be discussed, and this post is simply trying to get that discussion started.  Are there points of dispute here?  Certainly. Am I perfectly correct in everything I have said?  Probably not. So, go to the comments and tell me what you think.

Editor Update 9/18/08: Tedd Benson of Bensonwood Homes has a lengthy, articulate response to this article, and Lloyd Alter of Treehugger mentioned a few points to consider as well.  Allyson Wendt of Building Green also added her thoughts on the future possibilities of affordable, green prefab.

One of the posts by Tedd Benson gives you more to think about.

On the other hand, I do understand why costs might be higher. One of the big reasons is that the contractors hired to put the package together often have no motivation to be efficient, and furthermore, have a very convenient excuse if things take longer and cost more: it’s not their fault; they are the solution, the prefab package is the problem. In addition, the subcontractors who bid on the portions of work not accomplished with the prefabrication tend to charge 15-25% more for the same reason. It’s very often not whether the work will be more or less difficult, but just the fact that it’s different. It’s the out-of-my-comfort-zone tax, and it’s one of the hidden costs of any alternative form of construction. Too often, there’s simply an up-charge for having to think.

This last point wakes you up to what a tract home is like.  Actually, there are some data centers that have been built like tract homes too.

My biggest problem with site construction is that it often results in “devalue” engineering. Frequently, the people on the site think they know more than engineers and they reduce the framing schedule, reduce the fastening patterns, don’t install all the clips and tie-downs and otherwise save themselves effort and time by reducing the structural quality of the building. My start in the building industry was with tract home construction in suburban developments. Before I knew anything, the shortcuts and the flimsy buildings were appalling to me. We sometimes forget that the standard of building in America isn’t the custom homes built by the good builders, or the good prefabrication efforts by responsible companies. That vast majority of homes are tract homes built by low-skilled, unqualified labor.

 

Apple Data Centers = Green more and more

ZDNet covers Apple's disclosing more details of its Green Data Center.

Apple discloses more details on green data center plan

By  | May 21, 2012, 9:58am PDT

The reporter makes the observation others have that Apple has been working on its green data center plans longer than Greenpeace has been putting pressure on Apple.

An aggressive public relations campaign by Greenpeace may have forced Apple to disclose this earlier than originally planned, but it is clear that this initiative has been in the works for some time. Seriously, there is so much involved in planning this sort of thing, that is definitely was not in reaction to Greenpeace.

The article continues to cover the steps that Apple is taking to be greener than others.

As the author covers the dynamics between greenpeace and Apple, the author mentions the efforts Apple is taking to disclose its energy use to the North Carolina Renewable Energy Tracking System.

Oh by the way if you haven't heard Apple's Maiden Data Center is LEED Platinum.

The facility has earned the coveted LEED Platinum certification from the U.S. Green Building Council. We know of no other data center of comparable size that has achieved this level of LEED certification.