How This Building Powers the Internet

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2023
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    Sometimes buildings just don't look as important as they are. This the case of One Wilshire Blvd in Los Angeles. At first glance, its a generic office building in downtown. But, that blank facade is hiding one of the most important pieces of digital infrastructure within the United States. In this video we visit 1 Wilshire Blvd, explain how it works, and chat with Jimenez Lai who wrote a story about the building which explores its outsized role in our digital lives.
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    Architecture with Stewart is a CZcams journey exploring architecture’s deep and enduring stories in all their bewildering glory. Weekly videos and occasional live events breakdown a wide range of topics related to the built environment in order to increase their general understanding and advocate their importance in shaping the world we inhabit.
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    Stewart Hicks is an architectural design educator that leads studios and lecture courses as an Associate Professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He also serves as an Associate Dean in the College of Architecture, Design, and the Arts and is the co-founder of the practice Design With Company. His work has earned awards such as the Architecture Record Design Vanguard Award or the Young Architect’s Forum Award and has been featured in exhibitions such as the Chicago Architecture Biennial and Design Miami, as well as at the V&A Museum and Tate Modern in London. His writings can be found in the co-authored book Misguided Tactics for Propriety Calibration, published with the Graham Foundation, as well as essays in MONU magazine, the AIA Journal Manifest, Log, bracket, and the guest-edited issue of MAS Context on the topic of character architecture.
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Komentáře • 728

  • @DavidL-ii7yn
    @DavidL-ii7yn Před rokem +437

    Most data centres don't advertise their presence. The NYSE Data Centre in Mahwah, NJ might be a comparison. However, I do know of a card-processing data centre disguised as a dairy farm.

    • @dylanakent
      @dylanakent Před rokem +22

      For good reason!

    • @robertrusso877
      @robertrusso877 Před rokem +85

      I’ve see a dry cleaning business disguised as a meth lab.😂

    • @okaywhatevernevermind
      @okaywhatevernevermind Před rokem

      Yeah but did you know of the FBI surveillance vans disguised as taco trucks??
      TACO: Tactical Analytics Centre of Operations.
      Wake up sheeple!!

    • @situation_zero
      @situation_zero Před rokem +36

      The Mastercard data center in suburban St Louis, through which travels the data from every Mastercad swipe on the planet, is unmarked and has no signage.

    • @callumb4980
      @callumb4980 Před rokem +51

      @@situation_zero because there is no need to. If they advertised “Mastercard” on the front you can guarantee every grandma with a fraud charge would be turning up looking for customer service.

  • @BrandonJXN2
    @BrandonJXN2 Před rokem +585

    I remember years ago they were loading air conditioning units onto the roof via helicopter. I knew that One Wilshire was essentially a switchboard for the internet. Great video. I would love to see more content about LA skyscrapers.

    • @MichaelNolhan
      @MichaelNolhan Před rokem +6

      I remember being there when that happened haha.

  • @dustinhenry5213
    @dustinhenry5213 Před 11 měsíci +214

    Couple of fun facts...the building has its own version of a "swat team" and it goes 5 stories down. I was allowed to tour the facility back in 2003. Back then it had 5 generators and enough diesel to last several days. Myspace main servers were located in the facility.

    • @eustab.anas-mann9510
      @eustab.anas-mann9510 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Does the NSA have access to this building?

    • @davewood406
      @davewood406 Před 11 měsíci +10

      @@eustab.anas-mann9510 It's been ages since I've been in there but I have a sense of the scale of the place and I've also installed equipment in other data centers that does the kind of work they would need. So an educated guess... They likely do but they probably only fool with the submarine cables or whatever else is coming there that they don't have access to otherwise. The main issue is space in the building. Fiber taps take up space, as does the equipment that receives the output of those taps. So my bet is that the TLAs are only accessing there if that's the only practical place to do so. Because the sheer scale of tapping what goes through One Wilshire would take up more space than what's available at One Wilshire.

    • @san6788
      @san6788 Před 11 měsíci +5

      hehe myspace =)

    • @C0ttageChees
      @C0ttageChees Před 11 měsíci +3

      Myspace was such a gem

    • @jonsnow7844
      @jonsnow7844 Před 10 měsíci

      @@davewood406 Lol the NSA have their own access accounts to any and all machines in the building. "Wiretap" implies that the NSA aren't already authorized to access.

  • @johnc2438
    @johnc2438 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Yeah... I'm a retired cubicle rat these days (Navy, Bechtel, JPL, Toshiba, etc.). But wayyy back in the late '60's, when I was a teenager, I used to drive my mom to the old AT&T building downtown at Fourth and Grand (9:58) where those microwave towers sit and where she worked. Back then, the phone company microwave tower had an unobstructed view to Mt. Wilson's mountaintop antenna farm about 20-odd miles away as the crow flies. Later, I had a tour of one of MCI's early facilities a couple blocks away in an older building when we were learning about that company's plans for expansion. I passed One Wilshire many times over the decades since it was built in 1966, until I moved north. Fascinating video! Thanks.

  • @NeilFraser
    @NeilFraser Před rokem +22

    That poor serial port at 1:41. Ouch.

  • @dopenerd
    @dopenerd Před rokem +157

    A lot of downtown areas across the country are suffering from an exodus of companies and people leaving a whole lot of empty buildings after the pandemic. I think reimagining what and how buildings serve in the future is going to be key, this is a great example of positive re-use.

    • @okaywhatevernevermind
      @okaywhatevernevermind Před rokem +6

      The Twin Towers were actually data centres for the Beast. /s

    • @cavemaneca
      @cavemaneca Před rokem +1

      Stewart actually made a video about this about a month ago.

    • @FlowerPowerNZ
      @FlowerPowerNZ Před rokem +4

      If only it were that straight forward. Incumbent data centres have a huge advantage because everyone wants to be where everyone else is. Starting a new DC is a real uphill battle.

  • @rud
    @rud Před rokem +183

    I maintained a bunch of servers in datacenters once, some where old phone switchboards/central rooms in the middle of the city. Since people were using land lines less and the equipment had shrunk in size, the phone companies rented it out for businesses in the city. Some where in anonymous factory buildings. They made a point of making them look anonymous, in fact, they kept the external old factory building and built the datacenters within the building. So from the outside it looked like a dirty factory building, but inside it was very clean and you had to wear plastic covering on our shoes, walk over sticky paper before entering.

  • @jfmezei
    @jfmezei Před rokem +300

    Every major city has a carrier hotel. And there are 2 major aspects needed: floor strenght and cooling. For instance, in the case of Toronto, 151 Front Street was the former telegraph building purpose built to support heavy switching equipment. It is also located next to the main railway line which provides the path to intercity fibre trunks. It makes heavy use of Enwave, a company that draws cold water from depth of Lake Ontario and distributes it to nearby buildings, including 151 Front, so every air conditioning unit in building uses the cold water as heat sink and the hot water returned to Enwave. In this case, 151 is entirely carrier hotel. If One Wilshire is mixed use and still has offices with humans, it would provide for interesting challenges for security, fire code (securing fire stairwells) etc.

    • @shaunlaverty8898
      @shaunlaverty8898 Před rokem +4

      Spent some time in 151 Front 😂. And a few others.

    • @kennixox262
      @kennixox262 Před rokem +10

      I would imagine old telco switching offices might be a good venue as well - built to take the weight.

    • @tomthetitan101
      @tomthetitan101 Před rokem +4

      This is very cool to know

    • @augurseer
      @augurseer Před rokem +2

      I end up down at 151 almost once a month. Glad to see it mentioned.

    • @Horwitz86
      @Horwitz86 Před rokem +1

      It does not have offices any longer

  • @GeographRick
    @GeographRick Před rokem +51

    I work for AT&T in a similar building in my city. The internet speed in my office is insane!

    • @nuvotion-live
      @nuvotion-live Před rokem +1

      What is it?

    • @okaywhatevernevermind
      @okaywhatevernevermind Před rokem

      Have you tried to play gta online? lol

    • @boomergames8094
      @boomergames8094 Před rokem +4

      I worked at an office with 100Gbit. I had a virtual server on 10Gbit. I could not find a speedtest site that would rate more than 1GBit.

    • @hariranormal5584
      @hariranormal5584 Před rokem +1

      @@boomergames8094 Because at that rate, the actual peering sizes and even TCP's overhead and other shit comes to play. Such a huge amount is not all supposed to be use by a "single thing", rather is aggregated traffic. Seriously, you can find "100Gbit" almost anywhere. It just depends which point are you actually looking at

    • @boomergames8094
      @boomergames8094 Před rokem +1

      @@hariranormal5584 Yep. That is one reason why there are large packet options for local networks.

  • @robertharker
    @robertharker Před rokem +76

    Due to its lack of coolers and small number of diesel generators, this building is mostly office space. The heart of the building is the 4th floor Meet Me Room with its network of fiber optic trunk lines to the outside world. The actual computing resources, the servers and disk storage, are located elsewhere. The cooling units on the roof is enough for a few floors of servers. But not a skyscraper filled with computers.
    The building probably started out as one of the original CIX or Commercial Internet eXchanges built in the late 1980's. This led to most of the long haul carriers installing fiber trunks to the building. As the Internet started to take off and different companies wanting to exchange data with each other, more fiber was installed. These fibers connect the MMR with the actual data centers of the different companies.

    • @brosnan
      @brosnan Před rokem +7

      Yeah not being a purpose built facility, I am sure it has lots of limitations, and there would be buildings in Virginia with far more connectivity.

    • @davewood406
      @davewood406 Před 11 měsíci +5

      It's been 20 years since I've been in there, at the time the hotel floors were 15th and lower. It's 30 stories IIRC so about half. So yeah it's the meet me room then whatever provider has a suite or a floor that houses the transport equipment. There are "real" data centers dotted around the the area doing the rest. I did a battery plant upgrade there, this company had basically a quarter of the floor they were on but like a block away they had a couple floors(at least) of another building.

  • @Pete90
    @Pete90 Před rokem +5

    Anyone else notice the bent pins on the DB9 connector at 1:44

  • @_narcosis
    @_narcosis Před rokem +15

    I used to live across the street from this building and the internet connection was amazing, one of the first us locales with gigabit fiber

  • @adrianmillard6598
    @adrianmillard6598 Před rokem +4

    This building is one hell of a target. That's quite scary.

    • @woodhonky3890
      @woodhonky3890 Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah, and he just painted a bullseye on it. Hopefully this video is just misdirection. If not, it's blatant stupidity.

    • @shrimpflea
      @shrimpflea Před 11 měsíci

      @@woodhonky3890 It's public knowledge. The security at the building is insane.

  • @johnyoung5820
    @johnyoung5820 Před rokem +112

    Love the content, Stewart! As someone who did his undergrad in architecture, but worked in telecom and now software, and teaches IT to business and MIS undergrads, this stuff is my jam. Other interesting examples of carrier hotels are 60 Hudson Street in New York and the Dallas Infomart, which is an homage to the Crystal Palace built in London in 1851. Thing is, most people never realize that some of the nondescript tilt-up warehouses they drive past every day are in fact colocation data centers that house the edge sites for things like Facebook, Google and Amazon. That has to do with physical security and "security through obscurity."

    • @johncrandell7339
      @johncrandell7339 Před rokem +3

      Be it a nondescript tilt-up warehoue or a highrise steel frame converted to other uses, owners and operators ought to have taken measures to assure that their structures would ride out severe/sustained seismic jolting. The L A Times has recently broken the issue of steel frame reliability on pre-'94 constructions. Other major newspapers had gotten into the matter years ago.

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Před rokem +2

      I'm sorry, but their is no 'security through obscurity' of these buildings, they are all clearly marked on websites selling these services, because technical people need to know where to go.

    • @johnyoung5820
      @johnyoung5820 Před rokem +1

      @@johncrandell7339 I think it's important to keep in mind that every building is theoretically designed to the relevant building codes of the day. It's a lot like technical order for a weapon system; e.g. the B-52--the warnings in the TO are written in someone's blood, as we used to say.

    • @johncrandell7339
      @johncrandell7339 Před rokem

      @@johnyoung5820 * There remains the issue of the reliability of steel frame welds accomplished with a now famous brand of welding material. If you check into the matter you will find that the result of such welds is/was such that they are too brittle to withstand severe/sustained seismic shaking. The extent of use of said brand of welding material circa 1960 to 1994 is a MAJOR question in California. Broken welds that occurred in the 1994 Northridge earthquake are/were one thing, what will happen in a much more severe quake?

    • @xNYCMarc
      @xNYCMarc Před rokem +3

      Four blocks away from 60 Hudson is 32 Avenue of the Americas (aka 6th Ave). I think literally the entire world's networks go through 32 Avenue of the Americas. Even North Korea has a peering point in that building. A few more blocks up from there is 111 8th Ave. It's owned by Google, is 15 floors high and takes up the ENTIRE city block. NYC has 5 or 6 huge carrier hotels.

  • @kl3nd4thu
    @kl3nd4thu Před rokem +30

    Another thing you should have looked into when in LA is the hidden oil derricks that are still operational around the city but are hidden in plain sight. It's amazing how many derricks there were in the past, they were all over SoCal.

    • @asdfssdfghgdfy5940
      @asdfssdfghgdfy5940 Před 11 měsíci

      Wait are they actually derricks? Or just wells operating under some other method of extraction?

    • @scribklu
      @scribklu Před 11 měsíci

      @@asdfssdfghgdfy5940 Yep the there are two on Pico blvd, with 5733 pico being the most famous one. There is or was one on the campus of beverly hills high school.

    • @makeart5070
      @makeart5070 Před 11 měsíci

      ​​@Asdfssdfghgdfy Kind of. There are batteries of wells with permanent re-work rigs, either gantry systems hidden in buildings or mobil rigs on rails. There's on carved out of the west side of the Beverly Center along San Vicente, one at Pico & Doheny, Pico & Spaulding, Adams & Gramercy, Jefferson & Van Buren, between Broadway & Hill north if 14th St, Belmont & Beverly, Alvardo north of Miramar, the Wilahire Country Club, and a few more. There are still a few actual derricks left in Brea where the hills are too steep for the rework rigs to access the wells, and one north of the 91fwy near Long Beach that's now used as a communications tower.

  • @michaelcharley8384
    @michaelcharley8384 Před 11 měsíci +59

    A "sister building" in NYC is the ATT Longlines Building in Manhattan's Tribeca area. Unlike One Wilshire, the Longlines Building was originally designed to house telecommunications equipment and is or close to windowless and built to withstand a serious bombing attack on the city.

    • @mike4402
      @mike4402 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Low airflow hah

    • @AdvancedGemini
      @AdvancedGemini Před 11 měsíci +3

      33 Thomas Street. It still houses telecommunications systems too: There’s still at least a couple of long distance switches operating there (4ESS’s). The “other” long lines building at 32 Sixth Ave is now a data center too if I remember correctly. A lot of AT&T’s and New York Telephone’s (now Verizon) old buildings are now data centers or internet exchange points.

    • @carbonking53
      @carbonking53 Před 10 měsíci

      AT&T thought their center in downtown Nashville was bomb proof, but some lone guy with a homemade RV born explosive device took it offline. It shut down the 911 systems over a large area as well as many other systems. ATT said the building was bomb proof and all 911 systems were redundantly backed up by other centers in the area. Both were lies or proved wrong. The 911 systems that went off line who had been promised seemless redundant back up raked ATT over the coals after the failure. I know people who were present at the meeting following the center failure and ATT engineers and executives were unmercifully hammered by 911 system directors. AT&T's failure could have caused catastrophic loss of life if the event would have been part of a larger plot. The whole incident was swept under the rug so the general public didn't get to fully understand what a snowballing cluster f##$ it was and how bad it could have been if a larger attack had unfolded.

    • @nyssfairchild2244
      @nyssfairchild2244 Před 9 měsíci +1

      It was designed to withstand an indirect nuclear blast. Technology has advanced and now hypothetically a nation could directly hit it, but given the state of a few of them, it's extremely unlikely for the missile to even leave the tube.

  • @zacbackas
    @zacbackas Před rokem +59

    When i saw the title I thought you'd be talking about 350 E Cermak here in Chicago (which I might say I find more interesting visually than One Wilshire) but the scale and proximity to the interconnect between continents certainly makes Wilshire a cool building on its own

    • @timgerk3262
      @timgerk3262 Před rokem +1

      I (my company) was a tenant at Cermak, but never have I ever seen or visited.

    • @zacbackas
      @zacbackas Před rokem +3

      @@timgerk3262 My boss says he's visited and it sounds really cool to see as someone semi in that industry

    • @PaulFisher
      @PaulFisher Před rokem +4

      Yeah, Chicago is in and of itself a massive interconnect point for networking, given its location in east/central North America. This, of course, is in part a direct result of its previous (and current) life as a hub for the movement of physical goods and people-you want long, direct, and accessible rights of way when you’re running cable, and you know who already has those? Railroads. To wit: the SPR in Sprint stands for Southern Pacific Railroad.

    • @ferdburfel7447
      @ferdburfel7447 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@PaulFisher and even more interesting is that 350 E Cermak was the biggest printing plant in the nation (ran jobs such as the Sears catalogs, Time, Life) and used the rail lines it sat next to to distribute the information it printed. It was exporting information on those some lines, just the same thing they're doing at a radically faster speed today.

  • @timmmykk6982
    @timmmykk6982 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Many of these buildings in cities were telecommunications AT&T or western union.
    NYC has a few 60 Hudson, 32 Avenue of the Americas, and 111 8th ave. 111 8th is an entire city block. Google famously purchased this building in 2010.

  • @Cyberfoxxy
    @Cyberfoxxy Před 11 měsíci +9

    Some of the most powerful companies in the world. I get the feeling if you stare at it for longer than 30 seconds you get flagged as a threat and hunted down.

  • @pauliedweasel
    @pauliedweasel Před 11 měsíci +1

    In 2005 while I was for the Union Pacific Railroad Telecom Department in LA my foreman, I and one of our other techs had to remove all the equipment from suite 1520 which was the old Southern Pacific Railroad Telecom center for Southern California. We spent several week removing the equipment from the equipment racks plus dismantling the racks themselves and arranged on a Saturday to have a large box truck park in front of the doors of One Wilshire while a small crew of our techs from LA and West Colton cart the equipment down to the truck and load it up. I got a bunch of cool trinquetes from the place including several prints done by famous railroad artist Howard Fogg. Definitely a cool incident to be sure. The door was labeled Sprint because SP had actually start Sprint because the SP in Sprint stood for Southern Pacific.

    • @serafinacosta7118
      @serafinacosta7118 Před 11 měsíci +2

      That is neat. Oddly enough, Sprint HQ is in Lenexa , KS.

    • @pauliedweasel
      @pauliedweasel Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@serafinacosta7118 My foreman was originally with the Southern Pacific and spent some time working out of that office during his career with the railroad and supposedly SPrint started there operations out of that suite in the One Wilshire Building.

  • @jimbronson687
    @jimbronson687 Před 11 měsíci +1

    When I first started using the internet in 1988 via modem and text screens only (no browsers or web yet) there were only 2 MAE switches that connected large networks to make the internet. MAE east in NY and MAE west in San Francisco. Now ONE Wiltshire has 3 last I was there. in 2013 there were 319 suppliers of internet contentions competing for connections from co locators. I had two suppliers. One on 18th floor of 1 wilshireq and one on 6th floor with a fiber ran through a wall connecting direct to one wilshire. A old train station not far from One Wilshire has direct fiber to one wilshire so other than a few hundred feet the connections were the same as O.W. I miss that place.

  • @SeattleBoatdog
    @SeattleBoatdog Před 11 měsíci +2

    I was a regional datacenter and PAIX engineer for Akamai for a few years … you would be surprised where we have color’s and data centers are sited, as well as buildings, where 22 of 30 floors are various data service providers and peering exchanges

  • @theoderic_l
    @theoderic_l Před rokem +5

    I can't be the only one who loves visiting these out-of-sight places that frame, support, and power our lives. I've been to powerplants, ports, dams, and rail yards, but somehow I've never heard of this building!

  • @gopherfan118
    @gopherfan118 Před rokem +17

    A lot of centurylink or Lumens buildings are not occupied. When i did fire alarm testing there a lot of the facility was designed for switchboard operation. When those jobs became obsolete the buildings now just host servers.

    • @gopherfan118
      @gopherfan118 Před rokem +3

      There are still staff in the building, but the one is sioux falls hasn't been occupied since 2004ish

    • @bdykes7316
      @bdykes7316 Před rokem +5

      One CenturyLink building near me only has five parking spots for a 10,000 square foot building. Most of the parking lot was sold to a business next door. I suspect it has servers now.

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Před rokem

      @@bdykes7316 based on your description this seems very likely.

    • @serafinacosta7118
      @serafinacosta7118 Před 11 měsíci

      You meant Century Link the Carrier, aka Level 3 , right ?

    • @ShainAndrews
      @ShainAndrews Před 11 měsíci

      @@serafinacosta7118 CTL, Level 3, TWTC, Qwest. You have a point you're trying to make? CTL, and Qwest are the only two that had traditional POTS. TWTC had some limited COLO server space... that Level 3 made sure to fuck up post acquisition.

  • @s3cunit
    @s3cunit Před rokem +29

    60 Hudson in NYC and 56 Marietta in Atlanta are other major examples of buildings you wouldn't expect to have such significant importance based on their look, but they have a rich history that lends to their importance. Being from the East Coast I don't know much about LA, but being an old-school network geek I've definitely heard of One Wilshire. Thanks for the deep dive!

    • @ShawnJonesHellion
      @ShawnJonesHellion Před 11 měsíci

      History? As in what the human clones I summon think is real about their past when I just created them? Lemme guess. You rewrite it every year to make the trap of made up nonsense continue to deceive gods?

    • @serafinacosta7118
      @serafinacosta7118 Před 11 měsíci

      In Atlanta , the facility by Swanee, north of Atlanta , houses more servers , I recall it was run by Qtech. Not far from the mall. Google used to run its servers there , occupying 1/3 of the floor. They eventually bought land in Lenoir , NC and installed their own IDC.

  • @checkoutmyyoutubepage
    @checkoutmyyoutubepage Před rokem +13

    The building is practically the nerd of the buildings in LA. The tallest one up to US Bank were from before 1990. US Bank reminds me of a Toltec statue.

  • @SnakePlizzken
    @SnakePlizzken Před 11 měsíci +4

    I’ve spent a lot of time in that building. Pretty cool to see this because people always look at me like I’m crazy when I try to explain what’s happening there.

  • @tobybartlett
    @tobybartlett Před 11 měsíci +15

    I worked for a big multinational telco (not in the U.S.), and our primary carrier hotel for the country was attached to our headquarters high-rise.
    It was the most secure building I've ever visited. Despite my position in the company, I had to get a government security clearance to enter, and I was given a tour. Since the building is on the government terror protection list, it has incredible security, both in staffing and physical features. From mantrap doors to guards, to tracking devices we all had to wear, to endless corridors with layer after layer of security checkpoints, it really made me understand how blowing up that building would take out the entire country's communications system.
    I was only allowed the one visit inside, but it was fascinating to see what went on behind a very bland (albeit foreboding) building casually located across the street from a Fairmont Hotel. Looking at it, you'd never guess what was inside and how well it was protected, just like One Wilshire.
    Thanks for the interesting video! I just subscribed after watching this. Looking forward to more videos. ✌️

    • @vatomais
      @vatomais Před 11 měsíci +1

      151 front street sure is a secure building! a unanimously shared secret among the downtown Toronto IT folk, as it is very often an exchange point for many of those in the small-medium size (the big 5 obviously have their own lines), many refuse to speak of the untold horrors of what happens if you look at another company's cage, the guards, all carrying AR-15 style weapons, that escort you throughout the facility, one wrong step and you are barred forever. alas, the uninteresting nature of the building is a very purposeful, speaking from experience, a certain Montreal based bank has a datacenter in Barrie that from the road, looks about 1/10th the size, but is incredibly secure, even for those who work within senior positions in the company. i remember the tales of blocked roads and airways as the helicopters brought in replacement generators and cooling units during 151's refit not that many years ago!

  • @orenpeleg9820
    @orenpeleg9820 Před rokem +18

    Quick note: the beach you labeled as "Hermosa Beach" in the video at ~2:50 is actually Venice Beach.

  • @autohmae
    @autohmae Před rokem +12

    In most places, these aren't build in office buildings, but purpose build datacenters for colocation.
    Lots of carrier hotels like these in the US used to be where telephony companies were housed.

    • @serafinacosta7118
      @serafinacosta7118 Před 11 měsíci

      Correct. De commissioned central office switching centers.

  • @IanZainea1990
    @IanZainea1990 Před rokem +4

    I could listen to that guy you interviewed for hours

  • @BlueFurVR
    @BlueFurVR Před rokem +2

    9:58 The AT&T/PacBell building is at 420 S Grand Ave, not 400

  • @glennmcgurrin8397
    @glennmcgurrin8397 Před rokem +40

    Starting a datacenter isn't crazy hard, but it is very, very, expensive, go somewhere near good hub, get good connectivity through them, build out all the proper expensive core equipment and it's possible. Building a major internet exchange or carrier hotel with a large meet me room, that's hard, there is huge network effects where the more networks there the more networks want to be there, getting critical mass is incredibly difficult.

    • @jarvusff7726
      @jarvusff7726 Před 11 měsíci +2

      is it plausible for someone to start from scratch to into server buildings?

    • @mike4402
      @mike4402 Před 11 měsíci +2

      No, impossible. These companies are like safe investments for the mega rich.

    • @maxokream6269
      @maxokream6269 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@jarvusff7726😂 lmfao went from lemonade stand to server centers

  • @sobeso
    @sobeso Před rokem +6

    5:35 just wow

  • @LuckyPierre789
    @LuckyPierre789 Před 11 měsíci +6

    Fascinating. I worked as a messenger for a law firm in DTLA after high school and was in this building a lot. Thanks!

  • @ErnestJay88
    @ErnestJay88 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Basically just like "Cyber Tower" in Jakarta - Indonesia, the entire building basically just a supercomputer and data servers in all but 2 floors, 1st floor for Lobby and some offices, and top floor basically a dormitory for maintenance and engineer officer who maintaining those servers 24/7

  • @PCPSolutions
    @PCPSolutions Před 11 měsíci +12

    Pretty crazy how it went from a small California company developing the PIX to giant buildings for data interconnect.

  • @M3D1C2121
    @M3D1C2121 Před rokem +10

    Oh hey, I use to work there as an entry level technician doing cable mining and auditing. Fancy way of saying that I took out unused copper and fiber connections. Pretty decent for a first job, especially on a resume lol

  • @myponyislit6529
    @myponyislit6529 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Thanks telling the public about critical infrastructure locations.
    Very well done.

  • @steverude
    @steverude Před 11 měsíci +3

    I tell people about One Wilshire all the time, this is great!

  • @myoldvhstapes
    @myoldvhstapes Před rokem +4

    Thanks! I live in this 'hood. I thought the almost-windowless AT&T building a few blocks east on Olive Street was the telecom (and rumoured spying) hub for the region. It's akin to 33 Thomas Street in Manhattan. I didn't know there was an internet-specific building, as well.

  • @burby-thomas
    @burby-thomas Před 11 měsíci +2

    I'm on the 10 freeway driving past downtown LA looking right at the building as he's talking about it😂

  • @Matt-rx4pm
    @Matt-rx4pm Před 11 měsíci +2

    Nice job on the Video. I worked in OW upgrading the power and cooling capacity of the building. It was challenging working there because you had to worry if your team screwed up it could take out a chunk of the internet, I would joke we didn't want to piss off the teens because they couldn't get their Tik Tok. From a MEP standpoint it was a pretty cool project that you don't get to see often.

  • @downumop
    @downumop Před rokem +2

    I'm sure it's stock footage, but what happened to that poor DE-09 socket at 1:41 ?

  • @dylanakent
    @dylanakent Před rokem +5

    As a former network admin that worked for a bank and a stock market, isn't it dangerous to point the building's very existence out? Yes, it's interesting but now more people worldwide know about it. Personally, it's better and safer for the country if it's ignored by the general public. I'm sure I'm in the minority in my views.

    • @JamesMcGillis
      @JamesMcGillis Před 11 měsíci

      Critical infrastructure should be as secret and anonymous as possible. One Wilshire resembles an unsecured billboard beckoning terrorists. No card key system is going to keep a dedicated and resourceful terrorist organization from disrupting its mission. Look to Beirut, Lebanon to see what an unexpected explosion can do to a city.

  • @blackcountrysmoggie
    @blackcountrysmoggie Před rokem +2

    Informative and useful. I have a meeting with the manager of a digital infrastructure fund coming up soon. Great topic to talk about! Thanks so much for sharing!

  • @mikeinportland30
    @mikeinportland30 Před rokem +38

    Fascinating. I've known that building all my life (one of the most boring visually). And when I lived in LA I used to give historic building tours with The Conservancy that began near the exact spot you are standing in Pershing Square. I had no idea it had such interesting functionality within. Another story layer to the evolving city. Really love your videos.

    • @bakedpatato
      @bakedpatato Před rokem +2

      There's actually quite a few other data centers like it in DTLA such as another CoreSite owned facility next to Union Station (the one with all the glass right across from Phillipe's), one pretty much across the street from One Wilshire(the entrance is right next to Sugarfish)...you would have never know as they're indeed built to blend in

    • @okaywhatevernevermind
      @okaywhatevernevermind Před rokem +1

      @@bakedpatato all “carrier hotels” should be labelled “ ⚠️ D A T A
      C E N T R E ⚠️” in huge letters on top of the building so the planes know what to hit 😂

    • @ShawnJonesHellion
      @ShawnJonesHellion Před 11 měsíci

      How do i tell the fake humans I summon clones of from the others? They always tell me they have these lives an stuff an i just summoned them. So its not like they say "hey I was born last hour in a 80 year old rotting flesh sack"

  • @COPhill08
    @COPhill08 Před rokem +6

    Incredibly fascinating! Thank you for a great video - wild to think this comment will pass through One Wilshire before ultimately making it to your inbox, Stewart!

  • @marcberm
    @marcberm Před rokem +8

    Boston has a similar (but smaller) colo in the same building as Macy's in Downtown Crossing.

    • @serafinacosta7118
      @serafinacosta7118 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Correct. One Summer Street. Above the store. Very non descript.

  • @Gigalisk
    @Gigalisk Před 11 měsíci +1

    @ 1:43 - the most jacked up Serial/USB ports i have ever seen. SHEESH.

  • @sh0t0kan
    @sh0t0kan Před rokem +1

    One of my favorite buildings in LA. I love the Address ONE WILSHIRE

  • @nannerz1994
    @nannerz1994 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thanks for covering some LA! I'm originally from Chicago so I love your videos but love learning about the new city I live in!

  • @Fexiven
    @Fexiven Před 11 měsíci +2

    1:43 can't unsee the bent RS232 pins on that connector

  • @christopherwaller2798
    @christopherwaller2798 Před rokem +6

    In London, strategic industrial land in certain places in west London and near the Docklands is in increasing demand for data centres. However, what surprised me is when I learned that these data centres are up to 12 storeys high, which is far taller than what might typically be sited in these industrial locations. (They are sometimes classed as being in the B8 use class - "storage and distribution" - even though that is more typically applied to places such as Amazon warehouses that store and distribute physical articles rather than data - and therefore they can be built in what were until recently relatively cheap sites "zoned" for industrial use that are still close to the main power lines, financial centres, and data cables). One of the things that is being explored is connecting data centres to district heat networks - this effectively provides cheap cooling for the data centres while providing heat to new residential development as well as large customers such as hospitals and prisons.

  • @alexisaubry3801
    @alexisaubry3801 Před rokem +16

    Great video ! Can you please elaborate on the same topic with other datacenters from Microsoft, Google, and so on ? Could be a video about the way datacenters sites are choosen, most of the times for a bunch of reasons : ecologic, fiscals, technicals, and so on. Some places like Dublin are perfectly suited because of the very small difference of temperature between the low ones and the high ones, meaning that the amount of energy needed to cool a datacenter there is quite easy compared to other locations. And the cold and wet air coming from the coast is perfect to cool the datacenter down without the need of lots of AC (compared to other locations, once again). That's a complete science, and a world per se. And BTW, what a great channel you have ! Thanks for all the good work you and your team do.

    • @acuteaura
      @acuteaura Před rokem +5

      Dublin is primarily chosen for the taxes. If you want an example of a datacenter that makes perfect sense ecologically and economically, Google's DC in Hamina comes to mind.

    • @finnderp9977
      @finnderp9977 Před rokem +1

      DCs I know are mostly built into old factories or even old powerplant, afaik primary reason is existing power infra

    • @CubbyTech
      @CubbyTech Před 11 měsíci +1

      Datacenter spaces (not in cities) are chosen mainly for cheap power and tax benefits. Actual location for physical cooling isn't much of a factor.

    • @serafinacosta7118
      @serafinacosta7118 Před 11 měsíci

      Well, they started building these facilities in land bought out by rural areas. Chief reason being cheap power, lower cost of grazing land , plentiful available water ( data centers consume of cooling water instead of running power hungry HVAC ), and tax breaks. They could afford to string fiber to these outer reaches at their own dime , so it was a non issue.
      Google , for a while , ran dark fiber all over the US to support its own scattered data centers. As soon as they built one idc , they would cut loose from leasing up colo,space.

  • @psiga
    @psiga Před rokem +1

    Great little story; I learned a lot.
    (And even your sponsor, Henson Shaving, looks fascinating to me.)

  • @redmig5
    @redmig5 Před rokem +1

    I just did a project related to this building and it’s importance this past semester!

  • @artistny0000
    @artistny0000 Před rokem +5

    Many data centers are 2 million square feet plus. (The building on Wilshire is considerably less than that).
    These data centers have to be sited between two separate discrete power stations. They have a need for 200+ watts AC per sf. This building’s volume would barely have sufficient volume to house the AC units required for a large data farm. Most are located far from urban areas.

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Před rokem +7

      I would say the carrier hotels mostly house routers and other network equipment, not servers. They exist to inter-connect aka inter-networking aka peering and transit.

    • @LethalBB
      @LethalBB Před rokem +4

      These buildings don't provide compute other than edge caches, just interconnect. Full of 400g Juniper switches and DWDM gear.

    • @someguy9778
      @someguy9778 Před 6 měsíci

      Yes, this building doesn't exist, and everything you say is correct.

  • @chains007
    @chains007 Před rokem +6

    Great video as usual! Quick correction @ 2:49, that's Venice Beach (not Hermosa Beach)

  • @Casper042
    @Casper042 Před rokem +6

    I wonder if the orange is just the outer cladding on underground cables or if he really means old OM1/OM2.
    I would assume at a facility like this, most internal cables would be Yellow which is commonly used for Single Mode fiber which can travel much greater distances.
    ISPs and Telcos often standardize on Single Mode even for relatively short runs, so they don't have to stock multiple types of equipment.
    MultiMode (Orange, Aqua, Blue, Purple) are used for up to ~300 meters.
    SingleMode (Yellow) can easily do 10,000 meters, and some variations can do 40km

    • @kesslerrb
      @kesslerrb Před rokem +3

      I’m guessing there’s a lot more yellow fiber patch cables in that building than orange ones.

    • @mark685
      @mark685 Před rokem +2

      Telecom uses all single-mode - yellow fiber. Great video otherwise!

    • @uncledrax
      @uncledrax Před rokem +1

      Agreed.. the Telecom Provider in me had some nit-picky issues with the video such at the fiber color, but it's overall pretty solid and completely fine for the larger audience.

  • @LECityLECLEC
    @LECityLECLEC Před 10 měsíci

    Great video happy ur touching the subjects we didnt even know existed

  • @Bill_N_ATX
    @Bill_N_ATX Před 11 měsíci +1

    The cables aren’t orange anymore. They are blue or other colors indicating their higher speed.

  • @ericcarabetta1161
    @ericcarabetta1161 Před rokem +2

    That's where the NSA has their tap into the backbone, too, for "national security" reasons.

  • @checosa777
    @checosa777 Před rokem +2

    the rasor at the end, i burst out laughing 🤣🤣 it wasnt expected!
    interesting video!

  • @ingvarhallstrom2306
    @ingvarhallstrom2306 Před rokem +1

    I may be wrong, but I think they used One Wilshire as a model for one of the skyscrapers in Sim City.

  • @moretoknowshow1887
    @moretoknowshow1887 Před rokem +3

    Here in Dallas, the InfoMart is a similar scaled Carrier Hotel. Been there quite a few times w/ my IT Teams to review issues.

  • @boilinabag
    @boilinabag Před 11 měsíci +1

    i work in la. i've been in there. its a freakin fortress. lots of security. cant go into areas without credentials. that building is hardened... and primary fiber is under wilshire from the bay and east.

  • @DavidJamesHenry
    @DavidJamesHenry Před rokem +3

    It seems so tempting for a screenwriter to use it as a plot device in a high tech action film

  • @yootoob7048
    @yootoob7048 Před 11 měsíci

    Amazing, I just now learned that I pass a carrier hotel in Phoenix every day on my way to work. Great video.

  • @TheGreatGastronaut
    @TheGreatGastronaut Před 10 měsíci

    The magic of One Wiltshire is in its many basement levels underground. That is where the “carrier hotel” portion is actually located and is done so for communications security and robustness/resiliency from external threats.

  • @NatesRandomVideo
    @NatesRandomVideo Před 11 měsíci +1

    Every city has a few non-descript telco hotels and data centers. I helped build 18 of them once. And worked in many more. Additionally most cities have a number of less hidden radio sites that do important work also.
    People really don’t pay much attention to the things that make their modern lives possible.
    The days of convincing someone to cross connect your circuit before others with a case of beer are probably over though. Grin.

  • @andreferrbar4801
    @andreferrbar4801 Před rokem +2

    I work in a similar building in Brazil. People around have no idea about its importance... Also the HVAC system is insane

  • @pauld2810
    @pauld2810 Před rokem +3

    This was fascinating. Thank you.

  • @matthewgarcia3356
    @matthewgarcia3356 Před rokem +10

    Luckily with these mega server buildings, they can sit on a single lot and not have to cut through hundreds of peoples homes and destroy communities like those highways did lol.

    • @okaywhatevernevermind
      @okaywhatevernevermind Před rokem +1

      Luckily every building will be a data centre so I can stream the entirety of human entertainment in the comfort of my dank dwelling without ever having to step outside.

    • @editingsecrets
      @editingsecrets Před rokem

      DTLA historically wasn't much residential. Some SROs in the past, some trendy wildly expensive condos now. Still mostly business and government.

    • @serafinacosta7118
      @serafinacosta7118 Před 11 měsíci

      They don’t cut through eminent domain. They reuse and repurpose.
      Most IDC’s tend to converge in areas with strong power grids. Which is the opposite of what requires to power a residential track. So, by default , they go after industrial sites , granted it is on elevated terrain, way above flood plains.

  • @MikeHarris1984
    @MikeHarris1984 Před rokem +1

    Looks like "811" goes crazy around there anytime work needs to be done. Utility line markings everywhere. I wonder how much power goes there. (Immew Here in Phoenix, we have lots of data centers and they all have generators and almost all are on two power grids and providers

  • @LuteaNelum
    @LuteaNelum Před rokem +2

    You briefly mentioned contingencies for buildings like this, but the more I learned about this place the more interested in the topic I am.
    I'd enjoy a deep dive into what a building like this does to make sure it stays up and running even in the worst of disasters!

    • @Michael-ue9us
      @Michael-ue9us Před rokem

      Look into disaster recovery and backup and resiliency techniques for IT networking. Many of these probably apply to this building as well

  • @todayonthebench
    @todayonthebench Před 11 měsíci +1

    "It isn't a building for people, but a building for cables. And the fact that it doesn't look like much means that it can hide in plain sight." 11:55
    This is actually an important thing to consider.
    Now, another term for buildings like these are "internet interchanges", and a lot of these are actually not flaunting their location to the general masses. Most internet interchanges are intentionally hard to find. It is often regarded as highly important infrastructure and is therefor often hidden. Rarely is it a large noticeable building like we see here, or like the windowless skyscraper of Manhattan. But most of these interchanges are just in a random basement.

  • @spdcrzy
    @spdcrzy Před 9 měsíci +1

    Counterpoint: It's NOT the most connected building in the world. That would be Fort Meade, the NSA headquarters. The sheer amount of bandwidth flowing through that place makes One Wilshire look like a homelab.

    • @jamesfrankel7827
      @jamesfrankel7827 Před 8 měsíci

      The Utah Data Center built by the NSA. The National Security Agency, operational in May 2014. The 2013 estimate of the UDC having the capability of storing 3 to 12 exabytes. In thoes 10 years, at a rate of increased growth, the UDC now stores between 33 and 133 exabytes, an 11 fold increase
      According to Kryder's Law is the assumption that disk drive density, also known as areal density, will double every thirteen months.
      Therefore the estimated storage is now between 6 and 24 zetabytes. Zeta is the prefix for 10^21.

  • @GeoffCanyon
    @GeoffCanyon Před 11 měsíci +1

    Interesting video! When you're talking about the cables coming ashore, you label it Hermosa Beach, but that's Marina Del Rey you're showing.

  • @barryrobbins7694
    @barryrobbins7694 Před rokem +8

    Jimenez Lai is right, we are becoming more like machines, at a time when machines are becoming more like humans. This idea is reflected in our architecture - One Wilshire Boulevard.
    We need to reclaim our humanity and remake our towns and cities to reflect our humanity. They can be more walkable, and more sociable - parks not parking lots.

  • @philipmurphy2
    @philipmurphy2 Před rokem +6

    A Stewart Hicks video is always worth watching.

  • @davewood406
    @davewood406 Před 11 měsíci +1

    A bit of a semantic difference of opinion here. The meet me room is the point of this building. The heavy lifting of the internet takes massive facilities. This is "just" a convergence of backhaul. a common connection point. Not that there aren't webservers etc in the colo areas but The important part of this building is it's job as a cross connection point between the carriers.

  • @jimwinchester339
    @jimwinchester339 Před rokem

    So it's similar to the once-upon-a-time Hewlett-Packard facility in Florham Park facility in NJ, right around 2000.

  • @calmeilles
    @calmeilles Před rokem +2

    The strangest thing about One Wilshire is that if you sat down to design a building for the functions it now has you would not arrive at this model. Perhaps you might get something like New York's 33 Thomas Street (formerly the AT&T Long Lines Building), but really for all the mechanical and resilience needs of this sort of infrastructure you just wouldn't put it in a city centre at all and you wouldn't build in the vulnerabilities inherent to a sky-scraper into something so critical.
    The two things that lead to this sort of utility are firstly the slow agglutination of functions. One day one carrier moved in with a small server room and thereafter development wasn't planned, it just snowballed. The second is that no single business wants to make the investment in such a facility but many dozens of them can become the tenants or clients of a development for significantly less individual cost. But that's cost to the business. When you add in the building owners profits the costs to us as users ends up being more than it might have been were a purpose built facility to be erected.
    The re-use, adapt, repurpose endeavours the minimise stresses on the environment are positives, but come freighted with many other, perhaps less noticed negatives.

    • @editingsecrets
      @editingsecrets Před rokem

      Once you have some people meet at the place where everyone meets, everyone else wants to meet there too. The whole point of downtown, and of a giant telco exchange. DTLA is vulnerable but it's also so important that a lot of effort, manpower, money, and infrastructure goes into protecting the whole area. For data centers Vegas is now quite the place, with basically no major environmental risks for a hands-off tech building other than an earthquake.

  • @colormeinfluenced6997
    @colormeinfluenced6997 Před rokem +1

    At first I thought this was one of those ‘power stations disguised as an office building’ videos, but there are offices in there!

  • @kurtzcol
    @kurtzcol Před rokem +4

    you always have interesting videos too me ,keep up the good job sir!

  • @jonreznick5531
    @jonreznick5531 Před rokem +7

    I like that you mentioned the Matrix--all the references to place in the movie (eg. the addresses of phone booths) are non-existing Chicago intersections.

    • @rossmeldrum3346
      @rossmeldrum3346 Před 11 měsíci

      The movie the Matrix was filmed in Australia in Sydney.

    • @jonreznick5531
      @jonreznick5531 Před 11 měsíci

      @@rossmeldrum3346 Also true. But none of the street names in the dialogue are Sydney streets.

  • @jackryan1809
    @jackryan1809 Před 9 měsíci

    Excellent video; I was thinking of running my own servers. And that's when I realized seemingly empty-well maintained buildings around town are servers. lol

  • @lanzer22
    @lanzer22 Před 11 měsíci

    When I worked for telco companies I frequent a large exchange in San Jose, California that served the same purpose. It's a inconspicuous building made to not arouse any attention, but somehow people still know about its existence, and they often get bomb threats and the staff have to evacuate the building.

  • @Mranshumansinghr
    @Mranshumansinghr Před rokem

    I really like all your videos. Great stuff.

  • @tinkerbench
    @tinkerbench Před 11 měsíci

    NAP of Miami is another one created by Terremark now owned by Equinox. It was super cool to work there.

  • @OriginalJetForMe
    @OriginalJetForMe Před rokem +4

    Seems like a dangerous centralization in an earthquake-prone area within potential future striking distance of North Korea.

    • @editingsecrets
      @editingsecrets Před rokem +1

      Earthquake-safe engineering is quite the thing in California now. I would prefer to be inside One Wilshire than on the street if the Big One hit. And the risks aren't to this one building, they're to the whole region, a national priority for military plans.

  • @leisti
    @leisti Před 11 měsíci +1

    Square metres are denoted by "m²", not "sm". The latter might be interpreted as "second × meter", which is not a unit I've seen used anywhere.

  • @lucaspascual5956
    @lucaspascual5956 Před rokem +2

    @1:42 way to secure serial port access. Excellent content by the way.

    • @FerroMancer
      @FerroMancer Před rokem

      Same here, Lucas. I saw that RS232 port and cringed.

  • @RyanKearney0
    @RyanKearney0 Před rokem +1

    There's dozens of undersea cables that land on the western cost of the US. If anything happens to this building, it would be an inconvenience at worst. Traffic would traverse another path. Do you think the companies mentioned in this video have a single point of failure on their network?

  • @timmyjones1921
    @timmyjones1921 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I got out of L.A. in 1988 alive , thanks for the video it's very educational & eye opening ect... I won't return to L.A. unless I be come very rich .

  • @user-hq5vx8il9o
    @user-hq5vx8il9o Před 11 měsíci +1

    This is the place where everyone is an expert or comedian!

  • @LuisGonzalez-cq1nq
    @LuisGonzalez-cq1nq Před rokem

    This is a great video! Been and have gear there now (Flume internet) ... do one for 60 Hudson or 32 AOA in nyc.

  • @craigcook9715
    @craigcook9715 Před rokem +4

    Interesting that it's a SOM building. I listened to a very interesting podcast on Natalie de Blois, who was an early influential woman architect. She designed, among many other buildings, the Union Carbide building in NYC (which has been since torn down to be replaced by an even bigger building).

  • @san6788
    @san6788 Před 11 měsíci

    What a fascinating video I passed this building all the time