Aire
About Aire
Aire is a Spanish private B2B technology and telecommunications provider operating across Spain and Portugal under a unified Aire brand since February 2026. The company positions itself around connectivity, cloud, UCaaS, cybersecurity, managed services, and data center infrastructure for operators, technology partners, businesses, and public administrations. Its cloud and data center platform is built around a distributed Iberian footprint, its own backbone network, and a mix of colocation, private cloud, public cloud, backup, and disaster recovery services.
⚙️ Facility Highlights
Data Center Footprint:
Aire publicly states that it operates more than 20 data centers across the Iberian Peninsula, with proprietary sites referenced in Alicante, Toledo, Zaragoza, the Canary Islands, and in some current product pages Málaga. The company’s public pages are not fully consistent on the exact proprietary-site count, but they clearly present a broad Iberian colocation and proximity-data-center footprint.
Aire publishes dedicated facility details for several sites. Its Alicante data center is located at C/ Santiago Ramón y Cajal, 11, Elche Parque Empresarial, opened in 2016, and is listed with 500 m² and more than 55 racks. Its Toledo data center in Talavera de la Reina opened in 2022 and is listed with 800 m² and more than 54 racks. Its Canary Islands data center in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is listed with 235 m² and more than 50 racks.
Aire’s current footprint also needs to be read alongside recent corporate changes. In January 2026, industry coverage reported that Templus acquired Grupo Aire data centers in Lisbon, Madrid, and Valencia, so those locations should not be treated as current Aire-owned facilities without further confirmation.
Facility Design & Infrastructure:
Aire markets its data centers as carrier-neutral, with 99.99% availability, UPS-backed infrastructure, 24/7 surveillance, strict access control, integrated Anti-DDoS, and pay-per-use colocation starting from 1U. The company also emphasizes interconnection with major public clouds and keeping data within national territory.
Its Toledo facility is presented as meeting Tier III standards, with N+1 fault-tolerant systems for power, cooling, and connectivity, remote access control with encoded card and fingerprint, 24/7/365 surveillance, hot/cold aisle containment, and service continuity for up to 72 hours during a power outage.
Aire also highlights sustainability measures across the estate. The general data center page says some sites use solar panels, the rest are powered by renewable energy, and the company uses free cooling to improve efficiency. Alicante and Toledo pages specifically reference solar or renewable-energy operation.
Service Portfolio Overview:
Aire publicly offers colocation, interconnection, public cloud, private cloud, hosting, backup, disaster recovery, managed services, and connectivity into local data centers. Its cloud stack includes virtual data centers, computing, storage, migration services, and managed cloud operations.
Its private cloud offer explicitly includes private cloud environments, bare-metal servers, GPU servers, storage, and disaster-recovery infrastructure. Its public cloud offer includes VDC orchestration, object storage (S3), network storage, Kubernetes-related services, load balancers, and region-to-region disaster recovery.
Aire also provides managed cloud services across AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, and Aire Public Cloud, plus outsourcing-oriented MSP services such as 24/7 monitoring, backup, update management, and operational support for corporate systems.
🔐 Security & Compliance
Infrastructure Resilience:
Aire’s public materials consistently position its infrastructure around 99.99% availability, redundancy, data replication across locations, and disaster-recovery readiness. The company’s private cloud pages also describe a redundant oversized data network and centralized NAS storage replicated between two data centers.
Its public cloud pages add integrated Anti-DDoS, region-based DR, and private dedicated network connectivity between customer infrastructure and Aire Cloud services.
Physical & Logical Security:
Aire states that its data centers use 24/7 surveillance, strict access control, and controlled physical access. The Toledo facility page specifically lists encoded-card and fingerprint access control and continuous surveillance.
On the network side, Aire publishes integrated Anti-DDoS, security filtering, layer 4 and layer 7 firewall integration, and monitored network operations through its Network Observation Center (COR), which provides 24/7 specialized support and proactive service monitoring.
Compliance & Standards:
Aire publicly lists certifications including ISO 9001, ISO 14001, ISO 22301, ISO 27001, ISO 27017, ISO 27018, and ENS High for Aire Networks del Mediterráneo, with additional certifications shown for related group entities such as IDECNET, SYSADMINOK, and Teradisk.
Aire also presents itself as a Gaia-X member on its data center materials, reinforcing its positioning around European cloud and data standards.
🌐 Connectivity & Carrier Access
Carrier Neutrality:
Aire explicitly describes its data centers as carrier-neutral and its network as being built around operator-neutral connectivity. The Alicante, Toledo, and Canary Islands data center materials all position the sites as neutral facilities that can interconnect with other operators.
Network Capabilities:
Aire states that it runs its own backbone network of more than 33,000 km, with coverage in more than 30 provinces, a dark-fiber ring across the Iberian Peninsula, presence in major submarine cable landing stations, and a Tier-2 internet backbone with 2 Tbps capacity and more than 55 points of presence.
Its connectivity stack includes internet access, TIP services, FTTH, radio, 4G, satellite (AireSAT), and dedicated fiber. The dedicated-fiber materials reference MPLS structuring, VPLS tagging, QoS, and interconnection with major CDNs.
Within the data center estate, Aire promotes interconnection, connectivity to major public clouds, and on the Toledo page specifically names connectivity options with Aire Networks, Lyntia, Avatel, Reintel, Telefónica, Correos Telecom, and Vodafone, as well as IXP access references including AMS-IX, LINX, DE-CIX, EQUINIX, and ESPANIX.
Connectivity Use Cases:
Based on the published offer, Aire is well suited to customers that need Spain-based colocation, private and public cloud, hybrid connectivity, operator-grade internet and backbone access, cloud interconnection, and business continuity through replicated infrastructure and disaster recovery.
💼 Who It Serves
Aire says its model is focused on SMEs, corporations, public administrations, telecommunications operators, and technology partners across Spain and Portugal. Its rebrand announcement also emphasizes a combined proposition for businesses, operators, and public administrations in the Iberian market.
