Cervalis Explained

Cervalis
Traded As:Private
Industry:IT: Data Centers
Predecessor:-->
Successor:-->
Foundation:Cheshire, Connecticut
Founders:Michael A. Boccardi, Robert Crespi, Robert Carlson
Location City:Norwalk, Connecticut
Location Country:U.S.
Area Served:Worldwide
Key People:Michael A. Boccardi, CEO Robert Crespi, CIO, Robert Carlson, Vice President
Products:Managed and Professional Services, Cloud and Managed Hosting, Colocation, Business Continuity
Owner:-->
Num Employees:100+

Cervalis was a colocation, cloud computing, and managed services company headquartered in Norwalk, Connecticut. Founded in 2000, the company has four data centers throughout the New York Metropolitan Area located in Wappingers Falls, New York; Totowa, New Jersey; Stamford, Connecticut and Norwalk, Connecticut.[1]

Cervalis' Norwalk facility is notable for being the largest data center in the State of Connecticut.[2] All of Cervalis' data centers are Tier III compliant.

History

Cervalis was officially founded on April 4, 2000 by Michael A. Boccardi, Robert Carlson, and Robert Crespi. The name Cervalis was chosen as a portmanteau for "Serve All Information Systems", stylized with a C rather than an S.

Cervalis' first location was in Cheshire, Connecticut, where it was headquartered for a six-month period before moving to Bedford Street in Stamford, Connecticut.

Its first data center was opened in a former IBM facility on May 30, 2001, in Wappingers Falls, New York. Governor George Pataki was in attendance at the opening and helped cut the ribbon to the facility, which he touted as a prime example of how his tax incentives helped to grow the tech industry: "New York State is proud to welcome Cervalis to one of the fastest growing regional economies in the nation - the Hudson Valley Region. As a result of the $100 billion in tax cuts we've enacted and our aggressive efforts to foster the growth of technology-based firms, more and more companies like Cervalis are making the smart decision to invest and grow right here in New York.”[3]

In 2007, Cervalis had two major changes: Its second data center, totaling 40,000 square feet, was opened in Stamford, Connecticut; the company subsequently moved from Bedford Street in Stamford to Armstrong Road in Shelton, Connecticut, in a business park formerly occupied by Black & Decker.

In 2010, the company opened up its third facility, totaling 182,000 square feet, in Totowa, New Jersey, in a strategic location less than 20 miles from New York City and easily accessible by both Interstate 80 and the NJ Transit Montclair-Boonton Line.

In December 2013, the company opened its fourth data-center, located in Norwalk, Connecticut. The new facility totals over 168,000 square feet, making it the largest data center in the State of Connecticut. In 2014, the Cervalis headquarters moved from its Shelton location to offices in this facility to obtain a more centralized location to each of its four facilities, and to better accommodate clientele in the New York Metropolitan Area, easily accessed using the Connecticut Turnpike and the Metro-North New Haven Line.

The new facility was built on a site in Norwalk with unique attributes: Besides being located above the 500 year flood plain (an attribute present in all Cervalis facilities), the site straddles the electrical jurisdiction of both Connecticut Light and Power and the Norwalk Third Taxing District Electrical Department, allowing the facility to be dual-powered by two independent electrical companies; offering a greater level of redundancy than the average data center.

In July 2015, Cervalis was acquired by CyrusOne, expanding CyrusOne's footprint into the Northeast.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cervalis High Availability Data Centers. https://web.archive.org/web/20141010161159/http://www.cervalis.com/data_centers/index.html. 10 October 2014. dead. Cervalis. Managed Hosting Services. 28 June 2017.
  2. Web site: Cervalis Opens State's Largest Data Center In Norwalk. 11 April 2014. Casey. Donahue. Daily Voice Business. Norwalk Daily Voice. 28 June 2017.
  3. Web site: Governor Welcomes Cervalis and 221 New Jobs to Hudson Valley; Connecticut Company Opens New Internet Data Center Today in Town of Wappinger.. 30 May 2001. Business Editors. Business Wire. The Free Library. 28 June 2017.