nawork: Grevenweg data cente
About Grevenweg data cente
Located at 120 Grevenweg, Hamburg 20537, Germany, the Grevenweg Data Center benefits from a low-seismic-risk urban industrial area with direct access to multiple fiber entry points and major European network hubs.
Operated by n@work, a seasoned German data-center provider, this facility is part of a dual-site Hamburg offering (alongside Wendenstraße) and delivers high connectivity and resilient infrastructure.
The site is strategically placed within Hamburg’s telecom ecosystem, offering redundant fiber routes and proximity to the city’s major carrier nodes, supporting both local and international connectivity.
Designed for modular growth, the Grevenweg site provides flexible colocation and server-hall options in a seven-meter-high hall that supports large racks and dense deployments.
With its secure, scalable footprint and carrier-neutral connectivity, this location is ideal for hyperscale, enterprise and cloud deployments.
⚙️ Facility Highlights —
- The facility offers a total power capacity of approximately 11.0 MW and redundant power feeds with backup generators and UPS systems to ensure uninterrupted operations.
- Cooling and environmental controls include redundant air-conditioning systems, hot/cold aisle containment in a 7-metre high server hall, enabling support for high-density rack deployments.
- Designed with modular growth in mind, the radiused hall and infrastructure allow clients to scale from caged cabinets to full suites, aligning with evolving compute, storage and network demands.
- The site emphasises energy-efficiency and resilience, with infrastructure aligned to enterprise-grade reliability and designed for sustained service levels.
- Supported by the operator’s dual-site Hamburg presence, the facility offers additional disaster-resilient topology options and network diversity.
🔐 Security & Compliance —
- The Grevenweg Data Center employs multi-layer physical security including 24×7 staffed access, biometric or coded entry controls, video surveillance of interior and exterior zones, alarm system integration and VESDA or equivalent early-warning fire detection.
- The facility supports redundant power and cooling systems, separated fiber-entry points and dual feed infrastructure to meet high-availability SLAs for critical workloads.
- Operator n@work holds ISO/IEC 27001 certification for its Hamburg data-centre operations, demonstrating compliance with recognised information-security and operational-governance standards.
- With enterprise-grade security and compliance, the site is suited for regulated industries, cloud providers and mission-critical applications.
🌐 Connectivity & Carrier Access —
- This carrier-neutral location offers access to numerous local, regional and international network providers, lit and dark fibre paths, and seamless cross-connect options within the Hamburg metro.
- Redundant fiber optic connections extend to other key Hamburg facilities (including the Wendenstraße site and external carrier nodes), providing path diversity and low-latency access across Europe.
- The facility offers cloud on-ramps and multi-cloud interconnect options, enabling enterprises to link directly to major public-cloud platforms and content networks.
- With the Hamburg region’s strong carrier ecosystem and international connectivity routes via Northern Europe, the site is ideal for clients targeting European distribution, disaster-resilience and network performance.
💼 Who It Serves —
- Hyperscale and cloud providers requiring a flexible, high-density platform in a major European connectivity hub.
- Enterprise IT organisations and SaaS/FinTech companies seeking secure colocation or hybrid-infrastructure within Germany.
- Telecom operators, network carriers and content-delivery platforms needing dense carrier-neutral infrastructure and cross-connect capabilities.
- Regulated-industry users (e.g., financial services, healthcare, media) seeking German-based infrastructure with strong compliance and high availability.
- Organisations scaling digital operations in Northern Europe and requiring a resilient footprint in a major metropolitan data-centre market.