NRB
About NRB
NRB is a Belgian private ICT services, cloud, managed services, and data center infrastructure provider headquartered in Herstal, Belgium. Founded in 1987, NRB positions itself as one of Belgium’s main ICT players, serving both public and private sector organizations with end to end services across consultancy, software, infrastructure, cloud, cybersecurity, and operations. Public company materials state that the NRB Group generated €638.3 million in consolidated turnover in 2024 and employed more than 3,670 people, while its history confirms the company was created in 1987 as a shared IT entity that evolved into a broader Belgian technology group. NRB also highlights a sovereign infrastructure angle through its own Belgian data centers and its NECS hybrid cloud, which combines NRB private cloud with major public clouds from a single interface.
⚙️ Facility Highlights
Data Center Footprint:
NRB publicly states that its data centers are located in distinct buildings on its Herstal campus at Parc Industriel des Hauts Sarts and on the Villers le Bouillet site in Belgium. Its broader data services page describes these as two data center campuses, while a published housing brochure gives more detail: the Herstal site includes a data center built in Q2 2014 with 600 sqm of IT room and 600 kVA of IT power, and the Villers le Bouillet site includes 2 x 300 sqm of data center space with 2 x 300 kVA of IT power.
The same official materials position NRB’s infrastructure as Belgium based, geo resilient, and high availability oriented, with the Villers le Bouillet site described as carrier neutral in the housing brochure. NRB’s data center pages also state that the facilities meet Tier 3 (+) standards and are intended for continuity, local presence, and security sensitive use cases.
Facility Design & Infrastructure:
NRB describes its data center platform as fully redundant, with the two sites connected by resilient dark fiber using different paths. The company says the buildings are fully redundant and that this geo resilient infrastructure helps keep systems, applications, and data available even during a major incident. NRB also states that the facilities meet Tier 3 (+) standards, with reliable redundancy, multiple power circuits, fault tolerance, and suitable cooling capacity.
NRB’s data center and infrastructure materials also show that it offers more than simple space rental. Official brochures say the company provides housing, hosting, managed services, private cloud, and hybrid cloud from these facilities, while its infrastructure pages add that customers can choose hosted systems and also rely on a Managed Operations team of more than 200 employees.
Service Portfolio Overview:
NRB publicly markets a broad infrastructure portfolio including housing, hosting, managed services, private cloud, hybrid cloud, Infrastructure as a Service, SAP hosting, and cloud platform services through NECS, its sovereign hybrid cloud. NECS is described as a platform that gives access to the NRB private cloud and the main public clouds including AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, and IBM Cloud from a single interface.
The company also documents adjacent infrastructure services such as data services, security and compliance support, and service desk / service control center capabilities. NRB’s cloud and infrastructure pages consistently position the company as a long term operator for enterprise and public sector environments rather than only as a retail colocation provider.
🔐 Security & Compliance
Infrastructure Resilience:
NRB’s official data center pages emphasize high availability, geo resilience, and continuity. The company states that its data centers are linked by a redundant fiber optic network, that the buildings are fully redundant, and that the infrastructure meets the most stringent requirements in terms of Disaster Recovery Plans. The housing brochure also publishes a 99.995% uptime figure for both the Herstal and Villers le Bouillet facilities.
NRB’s mainframe brochure provides additional depth, stating that the company operates state of the art geo resilient data centres and that the main site in Herstal consists of three data centres in separate buildings. This supports a stronger resilience profile than a single building deployment and aligns with NRB’s broader positioning around fault tolerance and continuity.
Physical & Logical Security:
NRB publicly states that security is a major design consideration for its data centers and says customers collaborate with a national, reliable, multi operator player that provides a stable solution aligned with security expectations and NIS2 related requirements. The company also notes that the choice of NRB Data Centres is intended to protect clients from physical data theft, although the reviewed public snippets do not enumerate detailed physical controls such as biometrics, mantraps, or guard force specifics.
On the operational side, NRB has a documented Service Control Center bringing together Service Desk personnel to provide a direct, complete, permanent, and real time view of service status. This supports the company’s managed operations and incident handling posture, but precise facility level physical security controls were not publicly listed in the sources reviewed.
Compliance & Standards:
NRB publicly states that it holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000, and ISO 14001 certifications. The company’s certifications page says these reflect alignment with demanding standards in cybersecurity, quality, IT services, and environmental management, and also references independent external audits including ISAE 3402, ISAE 3000, and BCM.
NRB also says it complies with key regulations such as the NIS2 Directive, GDPR, and DORA, and supports clients in their own compliance efforts. Because these statements are published directly on NRB’s certifications and reports pages, they are strong evidence for the company’s documented governance and compliance posture.
🌐 Connectivity & Carrier Access
Carrier Neutrality:
NRB’s published housing brochure explicitly describes the Villers le Bouillet Data Center as carrier neutral. The broader company data center pages also describe NRB as a multi operator player, which supports carrier access flexibility, although the strongest direct evidence is tied to Villers le Bouillet rather than all facilities generically.
Network Capabilities:
NRB’s official infrastructure materials state that its data center campuses are linked by dark fiber, and that the infrastructure is ultra connected and geo resilient. The NECS platform further supports hybrid cloud use by integrating NRB private cloud with leading public clouds, while the API integration materials say platform connectivity can be secured through site to site integration.
NRB’s broader offering also includes hosting and managed operations around SAP, where the company explicitly references architectures interconnecting private cloud production with Azure or Amazon public cloud environments managed by NRB. This supports hybrid and private connectivity use cases, even though public pages reviewed did not clearly list discrete products under labels such as MPLS, SD WAN, or Ethernet private line.
Connectivity Use Cases:
NRB is clearly positioned for organizations that need Belgium based hosting, hybrid cloud, private cloud, and managed infrastructure with continuity oriented data center design. Its published materials support use cases such as keeping sensitive workloads in Belgium, integrating sovereign private cloud with hyperscale public cloud, and hosting SAP or other business critical systems in controlled environments.
The company’s sectors pages show strong relevance for public and social sectors, industry, energy and utilities, financial organizations, and insurance companies, which aligns with the security, continuity, and compliance emphasis across its infrastructure offer.
💼 Who It Serves
NRB states that it serves customers in the public and private sectors, including public and social sectors, industry, energy and utilities, financial organizations, and insurance companies. The company also positions some subsidiaries toward SMEs and small public entities, but NRB S.A. itself is presented as serving larger organizations with specialized ICT services and solutions.
Its infrastructure and cloud materials suggest a particularly strong fit for organizations requiring sovereign Belgian infrastructure, managed operations, hybrid cloud transformation, hosting, and continuity sensitive environments.
