Digital Realty’s TOR1 Data Center in Toronto, Ontario was one of three data centers from around the world shortlisted for the Multi-Tenant Data Center Award at the DCD Global Awards program. The annual award ceremony recognizes efforts and innovations of people and projects in the data center industry.
The DCD Award for a Multi-Tenant Data Center recognizes innovation in greenfield and brownfield data center design within this fast-paced sector. Finalists in this category were:
TOR1: From Printing Press to Largest Data Center in Canada
Previously home to the Toronto Star's printing press, Digital Realty’s TOR1, was transformed into the largest data center in Canada. TOR1 helps enterprises address their needs for more distributed data hosting, connectivity, and exascale computing within a single campus along with the flexibility to scale capacity and network bandwidth requirements.
In a facility once rolling tens of thousands of newspapers off its presses, this center now spans 711,000 square feet, with capacity to support a total IT load of up to 54 MW. Digital Realty’s thoughtful approach to the redevelopment of the Toronto Star building put a host of innovative and sustainable features at its forefront.
A Leading Colocation Facility
First, the need to support Digital Realty’s customers’ growth into the Toronto market and anticipate their future capacity needs.
Second, to maintain financial viability when retrofitting an existing building with extreme constraints to data center designs. This meant the design must allow for flexibility in density requirements, focusing on achieving industry-leading standards while meeting basic objectives for cost-effectiveness, speed-to-market, sustainability and reliability.
Phase 2 features 5 computer rooms of varying capacity, ranging from 4.0 to 8.0 MW and between 180-220 w/sf of density with a N+1 electrical redundancy level.
The project was awarded LEED-Silver certification for sustainable design and construction practices in September 2020. The project re-used the building core and shell and made surgical upgrades to accommodate its new data center functionality. This approach avoided the need to send significant volumes of waste to the landfill while also reducing the need for new materials. Throughout the construction process, 85% of all waste generated was diverted from the landfill.
The Phase 1 facility has demonstrated energy source savings of 14.9% and CO2 Emissions (in kg) savings of 63.3% when compared to a baseline building.
It has a class leading PUE of 1.25 and a cooling system design that uses no water. Data centers of this size typically consume a lot of energy and use thousands of gallons of water for cooling. TOR1 is designed to conserve enough water annually to supply 25,000 households.
Power cost is by far the largest expense for wholesale data center companies, considering the power consumed and the cooling costs associated with critical load consumption. A detailed analysis was undertaken to illustrate the return on investment and total cost of ownership of the highly efficient cooling solutions that were selected.
Morrison Hershfield and TOR1
“The team did an amazing job of coming together and delivering this first of its kind facility. We had a very aggressive schedule, with a lot of challenges. The building itself was very complex, since it was designed to house a newspaper printing process. The floor to ceiling heights and building profile varied greatly from one end to the other, and was not an ideal data center layout and elevation. The team successfully designed and constructed a highly efficient, world class solution that met Digital Realty’s needs.” – Jakub Pawelczak, Morrison Hershfield
Designing usable data center and infrastructure space within the constraints of the existing building footprint and structure was challenging. Compounding this challenge, the ownership change from Dupont Fabros Technology to Digital Realty midstream in the project increased the design and delivery complexities as the AEC team worked tirelessly to merge previous design guidelines with new standards.
Morrison Hershfield's History with DCD Awards
This is the second year in a row that a Morrison Hershfield designed facility was shortlisted for the Multi-Tenant Data Center Award. Last year, CloudHQ’s LC1A in Ashburn Virginia was up for the same award. Morrison Hershfield staff also won Young Mission Critical Engineer of the Year Awards in 2017 and 2018. We are very thankful to DCD for the recognition and opportunity to showcase our amazing people and projects. The 2020 DCD Global Awards celebration can be watched on demand here.