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Network + Systems Infrastructure
F E A T U R E  
Building Blocks

  December 1, 2002
  By Lori MacVittie, Steven Schuchart Jr. and James Hutchinson


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  In this article
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Introduction
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Electric Slide
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On Servers and Storage
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Network Infrastructure
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Lessons Learned

They say it takes a village to raise a child. Building our new NWC Inc. lab brings this analogy to mind--it's not an exaggeration to say the entire Network Computing "village" was involved in the process, and we're as proud of the result as any cigar-distributing dad.

If you've been part of a significant IT buildup, you know what we're talking about. Participating in the weekly conference calls. Jumping through hoops to get a budget approved. Deciding who's doing what, then a couple of weeks later clearing up the inevitable assignment confusion only to have it resurface a week after that. Pulling specialists together to build a stronger result than any one person could have developed alone. Relying on vendors that don't always come through. Seeing the pieces come together, later than hoped and in some cases not exactly as envisioned, but getting the job done. That's where we've been the past months.


NWC Inc. will sell products on the Web. To do that we needed a new two-ton air conditioner, a building security system, a UPS and power-distribution system and a new 100-amp circuit, new equipment racks, servers, switches, storage, routers, operating systems, a firewall and, most of all, talented people with varied skill sets. In the first part of this cover package, "A Start-Up Is Born", lab director Ron Anderson describes our business plan. In "Software Focus,", technology editor Lori MacVittie talks about the applications. Here, we give you the scoop on the gear that makes your friends envious--the high-tech hardware and its support infrastructure.

Where We Live

Choosing the facility proved interesting. We picked the lab because the location--conveniently in the same building as our existing Green Bay lab--the size of the suite--800 square feet--and the price were right. We're located in what is known quaintly as the "lower level," otherwise known as the basement. The building and property have been owned since the 1930s by the local Kos family, which also runs the management company, Kos Management. The site was, at one time, a chicken farm, complete with hatchery, henhouse and slaughterhouse. The main building is nearly 100 years old, and two additional structures are 30 and 50 years old, respectively.

Today, the building comprises mostly office space with a few walk-in businesses on the first floor. We've dubbed the decor, virtually unchanged from the 1970s, "little Swiss village." It's complete with mini cedar-shake roofs over the doors, fieldstone accents and mullioned windows.

The site is 50 feet from the cleverly named East River, and we were concerned about water getting into our lab. We checked with Kos Management and found that the building, despite its age, has a prodigious water-management system with redundant pumps. A closet in our suite contains one of the redundant sump pumps along with an impressive array of natural gas meters. The presence of not one but several gas mains has kept us from smoking the occasional surreptitious cigarette.

When we moved in a year and a half ago, NWC Inc. was barely a twinkle in Lori MacVittie's eye. At the time, we had in-line booster fans added to the air conditioning and installed two extra air vents as well as air dump-outs into the hallway to prevent overpressure. For power, we had 14 additional 20-amp circuits added to the back half of the room.

NWC Inc. Spotlight

This setup served us fine for about nine months, until the amount of equipment in the lab outgrew what the air conditioning could handle. In-line booster fans were added to the dump-outs, and that kept things comfortable, more or less. The hot air we pumped into the hallway warmed the rest of the basement all winter without help from the furnace.

When planning for NWC Inc. we knew that the existing air conditioning would not be able to keep up. We consulted building management and American Power Conversion for a solution. APC suggested an excellent data-center cooling system, but it was designed for precise temperature and humidity control. In our space, with its sump pump and interior walls that go only as high as the drop ceiling, APC's precision equipment would have been a mismatch because it would have been constantly fighting outside factors not in our control. Instead, we installed a two-ton air conditioning unit, with the compressor outside and the heat exchanger/air handler mounted above our drop ceiling. (One of the saving graces of this location is the huge amount of space above the ceiling.)


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