SeaLand 'Data Haven' is For Sale

SeaLand, the colocation "data haven" in the North Sea, has been put up for sale after a damaging fire last year.

Rich Miller

January 8, 2007

1 Min Read
Data Center Knowledge logo

SeaLand, the oil platform in the North Sea that was famously converted into a colocation data haven, is for sale. SeaLand, a former anti-aircraft platform perched on two concrete towers 8 miles off the coast of England, was featured in a Wired cover story in 2000 when investors turned it into a colo facility for web sites seeking to locate outside any government jurisdiction. Entrepreneur Roy Bates took control of the facility in 1965 and declared it the Principality of Sealand, a sovereign nation (and convenient tax haven).

The colocation operation fell on hard times after the dot com crash, and last year SeaLand was badly damaged in a fire. While there were many challenges to maintaining a data center in the middle of the ocean, the lack of a nearby fire department proved one of the facility's most serious shortcomings. Link via Slashdot.

Read more about:

Europe
Subscribe to the Data Center Knowledge Newsletter
Get analysis and expert insight on the latest in data center business and technology delivered to your inbox daily.

You May Also Like