beCloud
About beCloud
beCloud is a private joint limited liability company based in Minsk, Belarus, founded on December 19, 2012. The company provides telecommunications infrastructure, hosting, colocation, and cloud services through its own networks and the Republican Data Center, and it positions itself as Belarus’s first infrastructure operator. Its public service scope spans the Republican Data Center, the Republican cloud platform, the Unified Republican Data Network, and LTE infrastructure, with a primary footprint centered on Belarus.
⚙️ Facility Highlights
Data Center Footprint:
beCloud publicly anchors its infrastructure offering around the Republican Data Center in Kolodischi, near Minsk, which it describes as the basis for its Republican cloud platform and a core part of its national infrastructure role. The company presents this facility as a domestic platform for both government agencies and commercial organizations in Belarus.
The company also describes the RDC as the only modular fourth generation data center in Belarus and positions it as one of the country’s flagship data processing facilities. Third party reporting from Data Center Dynamics states the site opened as a 12,000 square meter facility on the outskirts of Minsk and was launched to support both state and private sector cloud workloads.
Facility Design & Infrastructure:
beCloud says the RDC was created using modular prefabricated design technology and international data center design experience, with Emerson Network Power identified as the solution provider in the company’s published overview. The company’s positioning emphasizes fault tolerance, security, and technical support as core design attributes of the facility.
Its colocation materials state that customers can place server and telecom equipment in standard racks at the RDC, with 24/7 monitoring and technical service, guaranteed power, communications, and climate support under SLA terms, and deployment options that go from 1U upward. beCloud also publishes support for a high density zone up to 12 kW per rack and IPv4/IPv6 assignment.
Service Portfolio Overview:
beCloud’s services catalog is broader than basic colocation. The company publicly lists IaaS, hosting, colocation, data storage as a service, SaaS, backup as a service, disaster recovery as a service, information security services, and PaaS within the RDC services portfolio.
Specific named products on the public site include Virtual Server under the IaaS model, Private Cloud, Secure Hosting on a Virtual Server, Kubernetes Cloud Environment under PaaS, and Object Cloud Storage. The documents area also references Container Registry, Web Application Protection, and multiple cloud service agreement forms, which supports a materially broader cloud platform than a simple hosting provider.
🔐 Security & Compliance
Infrastructure Resilience:
beCloud consistently markets the RDC around fault tolerance and high reliability, and its colocation page states that power, communication channels, and climate support are provided with a guaranteed service level aligned to SLA terms. The company also supports high density rack deployments and continuous monitoring, which reinforces its enterprise resilience positioning.
The company’s certificates page states that the RDC holds Tier III Design Documents and Tier III Constructed Facility / Facility Construction certifications from Uptime Institute, confirming a published Tier III positioning for both design and the built facility.
Physical & Logical Security:
beCloud describes the RDC as offering a high level of security and technical support, and its colocation materials state that infrastructure and equipment are monitored 24/7. The company also maintains a 24 hour security department at the RDC site, which is listed directly in its contacts page.
On the security and service side, beCloud publicly offers Secure Hosting, Web Application Protection, and technical support services for systems hosted on the Republican platform, indicating that logical and operational security controls are part of the broader platform offer.
Compliance & Standards:
beCloud’s certificates page publicly lists PCI DSS for the data center environment, in addition to the published Tier III certifications. The same page also references an information protection compliance certificate for an information system security system.
Because the company publicly publishes named security and infrastructure certifications, it is reasonable to classify its compliance posture as stronger than a generic colocation provider. However, I did not find publicly documented ISO 27001 or ISO 9001 claims in the reviewed sources, so those should not be assumed.
🌐 Connectivity & Carrier Access
Carrier Neutrality:
I did not find a clear public statement on the reviewed pages explicitly calling the RDC carrier neutral. beCloud does publish connectivity through dedicated channels, internet access, and national network infrastructure, but absent an explicit neutrality claim, this should not be overstated.
Network Capabilities:
beCloud’s infrastructure model extends beyond the RDC into national telecom infrastructure. Its company overview states that services are delivered via its own networks and the data center, while its project materials identify the Unified Republican Data Network and LTE Advanced network as key company projects.
The colocation service explicitly includes connectivity through dedicated communication channels or the Internet with guaranteed bandwidth from the data center, and the company also provides IPv4 and IPv6 addressing. This supports enterprise connectivity use cases even where detailed product taxonomy is not fully exposed on the English site.
At the portfolio level, beCloud also publicly operates URDN services and nationwide LTE infrastructure access, which indicates a broader network provider capability than a stand alone colocation operator.
Connectivity Use Cases:
beCloud is positioned for customers moving IT systems to a domestic Belarusian cloud platform, colocating equipment in a certified Tier III facility, or using virtual infrastructure and storage services hosted in the RDC. Its public materials clearly support use cases around government workloads, commercial cloud migration, equipment hosting, and business continuity.
The provider also fits customers needing cloud native services such as Kubernetes, object storage, backup, and post incident recovery, particularly where Belarus based hosting and operator managed national infrastructure are important.
💼 Who It Serves
- Belarusian government agencies and public sector organizations using the Republican cloud platform.
- Commercial companies in Belarus using colocation, hosting, and cloud services.
- Large corporations seeking dedicated virtual infrastructure through private cloud.
- Customers needing backup, disaster recovery, and secure hosting services.
