Colocation is a service model in which clients place their own servers and networking equipment inside a professional data center operated by a provider, while the provider supplies the power, cooling, physical security, and network connectivity required for operation.
In a colocation environment, the client owns the hardware, while the provider operates the facility infrastructure.
What Colocation Means in Practice
In operational environments, colocation allows clients to:
- Deploy their own servers in enterprise-grade data centers
- Use professional power and cooling systems
- Access high-capacity internet connectivity
- Avoid building and maintaining a private server facility
The provider manages:
- Physical infrastructure
- Environmental conditions
- Network access
The client manages:
- Their hardware and software stack
Core Components of Colocation
A colocation service typically includes:
1. Rack Space
- Rack units (U)
- Half racks
- Full racks
- Private cages (for larger deployments)
2. Power Infrastructure
- Redundant power feeds
- UPS systems
- Backup generators
- Power distribution units (PDUs)
3. Cooling Systems
- Precision cooling
- Hot aisle / cold aisle design
- Environmental monitoring
4. Network Connectivity
- Access to high-bandwidth internet transit
- Peering and IX connectivity
- Cross-connects to carriers or cloud providers
5. Physical Security
- Controlled access
- Surveillance systems
- Security personnel
- Access logging and procedures
| Aspect | Colocation | Dedicated Hosting |
| Hardware ownership | Client | Provider |
| Hardware responsibility | Client | Provider |
| Infrastructure facility | Provider | Provider |
| Custom hardware flexibility | Full | Limited to provider inventory |
Colocation provides maximum hardware control.
| Aspect | Colocation | Cloud |
| Hardware control | Full | Limited |
| Performance predictability | High | Variable |
| Scalability | Manual/planned | Flexible |
| Infrastructure abstraction | Minimal | High |
Colocation prioritizes:
- Control
- Transparency
- Predictability
Cloud prioritizes:
- Elasticity
- Automation
- Convenience
Typical Use Cases
Colocation is commonly used for:
- Enterprise infrastructure
- High-load applications
- CDN and streaming platforms
- Financial systems
- Private Cloud deployments
- AI and HPC clusters
- Custom hardware environments
It is ideal for organizations that require:
- Full hardware ownership
- Stable long-term infrastructure
- Specialized configurations
Advantages of Colocation
For clients:
- Access to enterprise-grade facilities
- Reduced the need to operate private data centers
- Flexible hardware selection
- High-quality network connectivity
- Better long-term cost control for stable workloads
For providers:
- Efficient use of data center infrastructure
- Long-term infrastructure partnerships
- Ability to support custom deployments
Challenges of Colocation
Colocation requires clients to manage:
- Hardware procurement
- Maintenance planning
- Spare parts strategy
- Operating system and software management
Operational responsibility remains significant.
Colocation and Network Design
One of the major advantages of colocation is network flexibility:
- Direct carrier connections
- Low-latency peering
- Private interconnects
- Access to cloud providers and exchanges
Network architecture often becomes a primary reason for choosing colocation.
What Colocation Is Not
❌ Not managed hosting by default
❌ Not cloud computing
❌ Not hardware rental
❌ Not automatically highly available
❌ Not maintenance-free
Colocation provides an infrastructure environment, not full operational outsourcing.
Business Value of Colocation
For clients:
- Full hardware control
- Predictable infrastructure performance
- Long-term TCO optimization
- Access to enterprise-grade connectivity and facilities
For providers:
- Strategic infrastructure partnerships
- Ability to support specialized deployments
- Efficient facility utilization
Our Approach to Colocation
We treat colocation as:
- A high-control infrastructure model
- Ideal for:
- Long-running workloads
- Custom hardware environments
- High-performance systems
We provide:
- Enterprise-grade data center environments
- High-bandwidth network connectivity
- Flexible rack and power configurations
- Assistance with sourcing, shipping, and deployment
We always clarify:
- Power density requirements
- Network architecture
- Remote hands capabilities
- Redundancy expectations
Colocation works best when:
Clients require full control over hardware while leveraging professional data center infrastructure.