DataBank is in growth mode, and the colocation and edge computing specialist continues to roll out new data center projects to expand its network. The company has announced eight data center projects over the past five months, and has just raised an additional $330 million to fund its expansion.
Today DataBank announced a new data center building in Northern Virginia, where it plans to add up to 40 megawatts of capacity in Data Center Alley in Ashburn. The IAD3 building will significantly boost DataBank’s footprint in one of the most strategic interconnection markets, where it currently operates an 18 MW facility acquired through its purchase of the zColo portfolio last year. IAD3 will offer 4MW of power in its first phase, which is expected to come online in the first quarter of 2023.
“This Ashburn data center more than doubles our colocation footprint in Loudoun County, providing a high-quality colocation solution for cloud, content, technology and Fortune 500 customers,” said DataBank CEO Raul Martynek. “DataBank is investing extensively across our portfolio nationwide, and IAD3 represents a tremendous opportunity for our clients to take advantage of Ashburn’s location and proximity the world’s Internet traffic.”
DataBank is a colocation provider operating in both primary and secondary data center markets. It is owned by DigitalBridge, a real estate firm with a vision for converged digital infrastructure, bringing together hyperscale, colocation, modular data centers, small cell networks and fiber to create a converged digital infrastructure.
DataBank has been an active consolidator, buying C7 Data Centers (2017), Edge Hosting (2017), a data center portfolio from 365 Data Centers (2017), Lightbound (2017), and now zColo (2020) and a stake in EdgePresence (2020). This series of deals transformed DataBank from a regional specialist into one of the largest U.S. data center operators, with more than 60 data centers, 1.2 million square feet of data center space, and 138 megawatts of installed UPS capacity.
The company’s growth has accelerated as DigitalBridge has begun using secured notes to raise money for new data center capacity. Back in March, DataBank raised $658 million using this strategy, which allows companies to borrow funds at a lower rate using pools of assets and cash flow as collateral. The DigitalBridge team has long used this technique to fund growth in telecom towers and other wireless infrastructure. In the data center sector, previous secured notes were backed by wholesale data centers with long-term leases and marquee tech companies as tenants, an attractive scenario for real estate investors.
The DataBank deal expands this strategy to multi-tenant data centers with enterprise tenants, who typically are governed by service agreements with shorter terms. Investors were enthusiastic about the March offering, allowing DataBank to issue a second offering of secured notes last month, raising $330 million.
“The strong reception we received on this financing reflects DataBank’s momentum and leadership in the rapidly evolving edge infrastructure landscape,” said Tom Yanagi, Managing Director of DigitalBridge. “This securitization was oversubscribed with participation from 26 unique investors, demonstrating the quality of DataBank’s underlying business and the important role it plays in our digital infrastructure portfolio.”
The two note offerings have provided DataBank with nearly $1 billion to invest in expanding its infrastructure to pursue a big vision for edge computing. And they are putting that money to work.
“Edge computing is a huge opportunity and we’re helping DataBank capitalize on it,” DigitalBridge CEO Marc Ganzi said earlier this year. “This is a story about executing on converged networks.”
Ganzi recently outlined the DataBank playbook for bringing together colocation, modular data centers, small cell networks and fiber to create a converged digital infrastructure. That effort has accelerated in 2020 as DataBank has acquired zColo and invested in modular specialist EdgePresence, massively increasing its data center footprint and edge capabilities.
It all comes together in a major building boom, as DataBank expands its existing campuses while also pursuing new construction in key markets. Here’s an overview:
The flurry of activity reflects DataBank’s ambition to build runway for a long-term expansion in key markets for edge computing, featuring new construction and campuses that can support multiple facilities that can be built as demand grows over time.
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