Get Colocation Pricing Now! +1 833-471-7100

FiberHub

About FiberHub

FiberHub is a private U.S. colocation, network, and data center services provider operating under VegasNAP LLC, dba FiberHub. Public company materials position FiberHub around enterprise colocation, disaster recovery, Acronis backup services, DDoS protection, and IP transit or transport, with a regional footprint centered on Las Vegas, Dallas, and Seattle. Its official timeline shows the business began building out LAS1 in January 2010, opened LAS1 in May 2010, launched SEA1 in December 2012, and opened DFW1 in October 2018. The company’s positioning is strongly infrastructure focused, combining carrier neutral colocation, private transport between sites, and blended IP transit connected to Tier 1 carriers and public peering exchanges.

⚙️ Facility Highlights

Data Center Footprint:

FiberHub publicly identifies three operating data center markets: LAS1 in Las Vegas, SEA1 in Seattle, and DFW1 in Dallas. The Las Vegas page says LAS1 is the company’s flagship facility and also serves as its company headquarters. The company timeline confirms the sequence of openings: LAS1 in 2010, SEA1 in 2012, and DFW1 in 2018.

The company’s network and transit materials show these three sites are integrated into a broader operating platform. FiberHub states it offers 10Gbps private transport between facilities, IP transit in Las Vegas, Seattle, and Dallas, and private transport or Ethernet transport between its locations and selected carrier neutral facilities.

Facility Design & Infrastructure:

FiberHub publishes meaningful technical detail for its colocation environments. In Las Vegas, the company lists N+1 redundant power, 2N power available, 120V, 208V, and 208V 3 phase power, Cummins backup generators, emergency fuel delivery contracts, and redundant HVAC or CRAC units. The Las Vegas page also shows colocation options ranging from quarter cabinets and half cabinets to full cabinets and 200 square foot and larger private cages.

In Dallas, FiberHub lists 8 MW with diverse path utility feeds, generator backup, 5 x 600 kVA Liebert UPS in 2N+1 configuration, up to 20 kW per cabinet, a dedicated meet me room, and eight carriers on net. In Seattle, the company lists 1,200 kW capacity, redundant diesel generators, diverse substation paths, up to 10 kW per cabinet, up to 40 tons of cooling, a dedicated meet me room, and carrier neutral connectivity through the Westin Building Exchange.

Service Portfolio Overview:

FiberHub’s official site clearly supports colocation, disaster recovery, Acronis backups, DDoS protection, IP transit, and IP transport as current services. The company also positions its network services around blended IP transit, public peering exchanges, and protected transport.

The company’s colocation product structure also supports multiple deployment sizes and operating models, including single server colocation, half cabinets, full cabinets, private locking cabinets, and private cages, with 24/7 remote hands, free rack and stack windows, and bundled DDoS protection shown on product pages.

🔐 Security & Compliance

Infrastructure Resilience:

FiberHub’s resilience profile is supported by both facility engineering and SLA language. Its SLA states power availability at a FiberHub data center is guaranteed 99.95% for customers with primary A power only and 100% for customers with redundant A/B power. Public site materials also show redundant generators, UPS infrastructure, diverse utility feeds, and private intersite transport.

The company’s network page also states 100% last month’s uptime at the time captured, plus 100 Gbps+ network capacity, 500+ network peers, and 10 Gbps uplinks. Its transit offering is connected to public exchanges including SIX and DE-CIX and is designed around multiple Tier 1 networks.

Physical & Logical Security:

FiberHub publishes specific physical security controls across its facilities. The Las Vegas page lists multiple CCTV cameras, electronic perimeter card access, and remote third party security monitoring. The Dallas page adds 24/7/365 manned facilities, perimeter fencing with a security gate, CCTV coverage, and electronic perimeter access control. The Seattle page lists 24/7/365 manned facilities, multiple CCTV cameras, controlled access cards, individually locked cabinets, and pre action fire suppression with heat and smoke detection.

On the service side, FiberHub also supports 24/7 remote hands across cabinet and cage offerings, plus free DDoS protection in multiple published packages.

Compliance & Standards:

FiberHub’s reviewed public materials do not surface a named ISO, SOC, or PCI certification list on the main pages reviewed here. The company’s public trust posture is expressed more through SLA commitments, facility security controls, manned operations, and network engineering disclosures.

🌐 Connectivity & Carrier Access

Carrier Neutrality:

FiberHub explicitly describes its facilities as carrier neutral. The Las Vegas, Dallas, and Seattle facility pages each include carrier neutral language, and the Seattle page also references access to the Seattle Internet Exchange (SIX).

Its network and transit materials reinforce this interconnection profile by referencing multiple Tier 1 uplinks, hundreds of direct peers, public peering exchanges, and transport to selected carrier neutral facilities.

Network Capabilities:

FiberHub operates a network platform with 10Gbps private transport between each facility, multiple 10Gbps uplinks to providers such as NTT, Cogent, and HE.Net, and more than 500 network peers. The network page also references five points of presence and public looking glass tools for Las Vegas, Dallas, and Seattle.

Its IP transit service is available in Las Vegas, Seattle, and Dallas, with metered and unmetered ports, 10Gig ports, on demand or always on DDoS protection, and exchange presence on SIX and DE-CIX. Dallas also has a dedicated link to Dallas Infomart, while Las Vegas references connectivity to the Any2 peering exchange in Los Angeles.

Connectivity Use Cases:

FiberHub’s published platform supports organizations that want carrier neutral colocation in Las Vegas, Dallas, or Seattle with private transport between sites, DDoS protection, and public peering access.

It also supports customers needing disaster recovery, backup, and blended IP transit, as well as businesses looking for low latency presence in the western U.S., central U.S., or Pacific Northwest. The Dallas and Las Vegas market pages both emphasize geographic and latency advantages for regional deployment.

💼 Who It Serves

Businesses needing carrier neutral colocation in Las Vegas, Dallas, or Seattle.

Organizations requiring IP transit, transport, and direct access to public peering exchanges.

Customers deploying disaster recovery and backup solutions alongside colocation.

Enterprises seeking multi site infrastructure with private transport between FiberHub locations.