Exa’s new route connects Ashburn and Atlanta

  • Exa Infrastructure has unveiled a new route connecting Ashburn and Atlanta to strengthen its presence in North America.
  • Atlanta is emerging as an important data centre hub and the fastest growing data centre market in the United States.
  • Customers will be able to “live” end-to-end single-source circuits from Atlanta to London, enabling better operational efficiency and control.

A new route connecting Ashburn and Atlanta

Exa Infrastructure has unveiled a new route connecting Ashburn and Atlanta to strengthen its presence in North America. According to CBRE’s North American Data Centre Trends Report for Q2 2023, Atlanta is emerging as an important data centre hub and the fastest growing data centre market in the United States. Data centre projects under construction in Atlanta grew by 211% between the first half of 20243 and the second half of 2023, and as the report notes, significant major campus developments are being drawn.

The new report will follow the Appalachian foundation and will introduce “resilient and diverse” offerings from all existing options on this route. Exa will deploy the new DWDM Flex Ciena system to achieve optimal latency and optionality up to 400G.

Also read: What is a dual band wireless router?

Plans are in line with network expansion in North America

Steve Roberts, senior vice President of Strategic Investments and Product Management at Exa Infrastructure, said: “This is an important step for EXA Infrastructure as we continue to implement our broader strategy to connect the high-growth data centre market in North America.

“Atlanta is a key market for many of our customers, including those with an AI focus, and this new route will meet their connectivity needs to Europe and beyond.”

The network expansion in North America is in line with Exa infrastructure’s investment strategy to expand the vast network it owns and provide an additional portfolio of online routing to connect to new data centre markets and across the Atlantic.

Customers will be able to “live” end-to-end single-source circuits from Atlanta to London, enabling better operational efficiency and control.

Tuna-Tu

Tuna Tu

Tuna Tu, an intern reporter at BTW media dedicated in IT infrastructure and media. She graduated from The Communication University of Zhejiang and now works in Hangzhou. Send tips to t.tu@btw.media.

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