Server Room Design
Southern California.
WCC Technologies Group delivers server room design and buildouts across Southern California — greenfield design, renovation, power systems (UPS, generator, PDU), cooling (CRAC/CRAH, containment, in-row), fire suppression (FM-200, Novec, pre-action), structured cabling, physical security, environmental monitoring, and commissioning. Uptime Institute tier-aligned design from Tier 2 through near-Tier 4.
Server room design in Southern California — from space planning through commissioning.
Server room design in Southern California is a discipline that combines electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, structured cabling, fire protection, physical security, and operations planning into one coordinated buildout. Get any of these wrong and the rest of the design suffers. Undersize cooling and you create thermal shutdown risk. Oversize UPS and you waste capital while creating efficiency problems. Skip containment and you blow operational cost on cooling for years. WCC's server room design integrates all disciplines from the start rather than treating each as a separate vendor problem.
Tier targeting matters as much as size targeting. Uptime Institute Tier 3 (~99.982% availability, concurrently maintainable) is the typical California mid-market enterprise target — allows maintenance without business impact at reasonable redundancy cost. Tier 4 (~99.995%, fault tolerant) makes sense for financial services, healthcare critical systems, and federal workloads where downtime cost exceeds redundancy cost. WCC designs to appropriate tier based on workload criticality, not aspirational reliability goals. Greenfield buildouts take 6-12 months; renovations 2-7 months.
This page covers WCC's server room design scope. For broader data center scope, see data center services hub. For data center cabling specifically, see data center cabling. For backup/DR design, see backup and disaster recovery.
Server room design — five disciplines integrated from the start.
Server room design integrates electrical, mechanical, structured cabling, fire protection, and physical security. Treating each as a separate vendor problem creates coordination failures; integrated design prevents them.
Power that survives outages and supports growth
Electrical scope covers utility entrance, automatic transfer switching, UPS sizing for runtime requirements (typically 10-30 minutes bridging to generator), generator integration with automatic transfer switch, PDU distribution at rack level, branch circuit sizing per rack, and metering for capacity planning. UPS topology choice — N+1 for Tier 3, 2N for Tier 4 — depends on tier targeting and budget. Critical to size for ultimate capacity not just initial deployment.
Removing heat that scales with load
Cooling scope covers heat load calculation (4-8 kW per standard rack, 15-25 kW for high-density, 25-100+ kW for AI/GPU), CRAC or CRAH unit sizing with N+1 redundancy minimum, hot/cold aisle containment design (significantly reduces operational cost), in-row cooling for high-density zones, and environmental monitoring with alerting. Liquid cooling planning for future AI workloads even if not initially required — retrofitting later is expensive. Most California mid-market server rooms over-cool inefficiently; containment design fixes this.
The physical layer everything else runs on
Data center cabling scope covers backbone fiber (OM4 multimode for short distances, OS2 singlemode for longer runs and future-proofing), horizontal copper (Cat6A for 10GbE to rack), top-of-rack (ToR) vs end-of-row (EoR) architecture decision, structured panel and patch design, overhead vs underfloor cable trays, labeling standards, and cable management. Done correctly, cabling supports 10+ years of equipment refresh cycles. Done poorly, it creates rework with every refresh.
Protection that doesn't damage equipment
Fire suppression options depend on space size, equipment value, and California fire code requirements. Clean agent (FM-200, Novec 1230, FE-25): non-conductive, no equipment damage from discharge, suitable for occupied spaces. Pre-action sprinkler: water-based but won't discharge without smoke detection plus sprinkler activation — common code requirement for larger spaces. Inert gas (Argonite, IG-541): suitable for sensitive equipment, larger storage footprint. Design balances cost, compliance, equipment protection, and recharge service.
Knowing who's in the room and what's happening
Physical security scope covers access control with full audit trail (biometric or card reader, dual-factor for sensitive zones), video surveillance covering entry points and rack rows, mantrap design for high-security spaces, environmental monitoring (temperature, humidity, water detection, smoke detection) with multi-channel alerting (email, SMS, ticketing integration), and SNMP/Modbus integration with operations platforms. Most California server room incidents involve environmental issues caught too late — monitoring is the early warning system.
How WCC delivers server room design across Southern California.
Server room buildouts run in six phases — site assessment first, integrated design before any construction, phased buildout with testing, and full commissioning before handover. Long-lead items identified early to protect timeline.
Site Assessment
Existing conditions assessment — utility capacity, structural assessment, code compliance gaps, existing infrastructure inventory, and integration requirements. Site assessment determines whether renovation makes sense or whether greenfield in a different space is the better path.
Integrated Design
Coordinated design across all five disciplines — electrical, mechanical, structured cabling, fire suppression, physical security. Single design document avoiding vendor coordination failures. Tier targeting validated against business requirements; long-lead items identified and ordered early.
Permits & Procurement
Permitting through local Southern California municipalities; equipment procurement with attention to long-lead items (CRAC units 12-20 weeks, large UPS 8-14 weeks, generators 16-24 weeks). Procurement coordinated against construction schedule to avoid storage and protect timeline.
Construction
Coordinated construction with electrical, mechanical, cabling, fire suppression, and security trades. WCC manages trades and quality through buildout. For renovations in occupied spaces, phased construction maintains business continuity. Daily progress communication and weekly project status reviews with customer.
Commissioning
Systematic testing of every subsystem — electrical load testing, cooling capacity verification, fire suppression discharge testing, structured cabling certification, environmental monitoring validation, physical security testing. Commissioning data documented as baseline for ongoing operations and warranty support.
Documentation & Handover
Complete documentation handover — as-built drawings, equipment inventory, electrical schedules, cooling commissioning data, fire suppression certificates, cabling certification, physical security access lists, environmental monitoring configuration, and operating procedures. Ongoing maintenance and support typically continues under managed services or service contract.
Server room design in Southern California — frequently asked questions.
Common questions about server room design — covering scope, cost, timeline, Uptime Institute tiers, power and cooling, fire suppression, renovation in occupied spaces, high-density workloads, and documentation.
Beyond Server Room Design — Related Data Center Services.
Server room design is one practice within WCC's data center services. Related pages cover other infrastructure workstreams plus county-specific design pages.
Data Center Hub
WCC's full data center practice — design, virtualization, backup/DR, colocation.
Los Angeles County
Server room design for Los Angeles County — local code, permitting, and field service.
Orange County
Server room design for Orange County — local code, permitting, and field service.
Inland Empire
Server room design for Inland Empire (San Bernardino, Riverside) — local code and field service.
San Diego County
Server room design for San Diego County — local code, permitting, and field service.
Data Center Cabling
Cat6A copper and OM4/OS2 fiber structured cabling for data center environments.
Request a Server Room Design Assessment
Looking at server room design in Southern California? Tell us your current state (existing server room, new space, growing out of wiring closet), workload profile, redundancy requirements, and what's driving the conversation — capacity, consolidation, refresh, new building — and WCC will provide a fixed-fee design proposal after site assessment. NDA in place before any environment detail shared.
