SERVICE · RACK & STACK

We build it right. Anywhere.

From rack design to structured cabling and power validation, full build-outs delivered globally and documented to the cable.

Tell us what you need

From box to rack.

Unbox & install · we rack it

Cable & validate · power and network

Document · down to the cable

BUILD PHASES

Five phases. One standard.

Every build-out runs through the same checklist.

1

Design

We plan the rack layout, power budget and cable paths before anything ships.

2

Build

Servers, switches and PDUs racked exactly to the plan.

3

Cable

Structured cabling, dressed and labeled on both ends.

4

Validate

Every port, power feed and link tested before handover.

5

Document

Complete documentation in Netbox, down to the cable.

WHAT'S INCLUDED

Documented to the cable.

Rack & stack is the physical build-out of your infrastructure: racking servers, switches and PDUs, running and dressing the cabling, validating power and links, and documenting the result, so a rack you've never stood in front of is still fully known.

We start from your plan, or build one with you. Need a rack elevation drawn up first? We deliver one on request, mapping units, power budget and cable paths before anything ships, so the build on the day is execution, not improvisation.

Cabling is structured, dressed and labeled on both ends to your scheme. Every port, power feed and link is tested before handover, no "should be fine", and the whole build is recorded in Netbox, down to the cable, with photo proof and a written report.

The vendor doesn't change the job, Cisco, HPE, Dell, Supermicro or whatever you run, and neither does the location: the same checklist runs whether the rack is in Amsterdam or on the other side of the world.

Layer One engineer building out a server rack on site Close-up of a labeled fiber connector being handled at a switch Two Layer One engineers working at racks in a datacenter aisle

Build-outs delivered globally. The same standard, wherever your racks are.

View locations

Need hands in the datacenter?

Tell us what you're running. We'll tell you how we'd handle it.