What do I have to consider when I'm planning a new server room for a small company (30 PCs, 5 servers, a couple of switches, routers, UPS...)?
What are the most important aspects in order to protect the hardware? What things do not belong in a server closet?
Edit: You may also be interested in this question: Server Room Survival Kit.
Thank you!
You might want to place a small shelf near the entrance to put a pair of these
(source: a-chainsaw.com)
In my experience, the ideal server room will have the following:
There's a lot that can go into a server room, if you can get away with a lot of this, your life as an admin will be so much better. The easier it is to get to equipment, trace the setup and get your problems solved, the more effective you can be. Good luck!
I was just watching the film 'Eagle Eye' - apparently the perfect server room involves covering the walls with oddly-coloured fishbowls, which talk via infrared (???) to your main 'CPU', which itself moves around on a robotic arm with a glowing 'eye' set into the middle. Oh and build the whole thing over a large body of water too, this will help in some way ;)
Look at everything from a risk management point of view and everything will fall into place.
In addition to Techboy's excellent list:
From what I am reading here most people are going for massive over kill. You have 5 server and 30 work stations, so since this is a small company by the sounds of it I very much doubt the boss/owner will spring for a biometric scanner, pass card scanner and video system as some examples unless you already have these and it would be a cheap add on for the server room.
So I did one almost the same as what you had, 20 workstations & 8 servers.
Here is what I found went well and was a good cost on the typical limited budget of a small company.
This is what I had in mine, network wiring, etc was all labeled and well organized as well, how that setup is dependent on where it comes in.
Biggest things, keep it organized, and make sure you have room to expand for future growth.
Sterile Environment Is A Must, you must have acceptable flooring, don't even go near carpet as it collects dust. Typically i would opt for raised flooring, is a good option as it's easy to run cable.
Don't Skimp On Cheap Data Racks, with a good cable management system, run one side data and the other power, as some countries regulations don't allow mixing data and power.
The NOC
Above left: The submarine engines used for backup power. Above right: Another view of the power equipment.
Above: This map shows the layout of the data center.
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Think about DR planning from the get-go. If I had it to do all over again, I'd have separated the network gear (switches and routers) from the servers, and had a shorter (30u is great) so I could have just rolled the rack out the door and onto a truck that time when Verizon couldn't replace a backhoed T1 line for FOUR FREAKING DAYS and we had to move the servers to our DR location. (Not that I'm still bitter.) Also, depending on location, it's a good idea to have at least one 208 or 240V circuit and space to put the spot cooler when a hurricane knocks out your HVAC in August in Texas.