If you're shopping for colocation in Vegas, you've probably seen DataBank's LAS1 facility pop up. This isn't some fly-by-night operation—it's actually the former zColo datacenter that DataBank acquired from Zayo Group back in 2020, bringing decades of infrastructure expertise under one roof.
The facility sits just minutes from McCarran International Airport and about 5 minutes from The Strip, which sounds convenient until you realize how much that matters for emergency site visits or hardware deployments. Warm Springs Road runs right past it, and there's actual parking in front—something you don't take for granted in Vegas.
The 28,000 square feet of space puts it in that sweet spot where it's big enough to handle serious enterprise workloads but not so massive that you're just another ticket number. Whether you're running payment processing for casinos, hosting gaming platforms, or managing telecom infrastructure, the power density and network connectivity can handle it.
Here's what you're actually getting when you rack equipment at LAS1:
Power redundancy runs on N+1 configuration across cooling, HVAC, and UPS systems. That means if one component fails, there's a backup standing by without triggering failover chaos. UPS and generator systems keep everything online during grid issues, which in a desert climate with summer power demands, happens more than people expect.
Environmental controls include dedicated cooling systems and fire detection/suppression that meet datacenter standards. The facility operates 24/7 with monitoring, and they've completed SOC1/SSAE16 Type II audits—the compliance framework that replaced SAS 70 and actually means something for financial services and regulated industries.
The critical infrastructure architecture eliminates single points of failure, which is baseline for any serious colocation but still worth confirming when you're moving production workloads.
Banks and financial services need the compliance certifications and uptime guarantees. Casinos require low-latency connections to payment processors and gaming networks. Web developers and SaaS companies use it for West Coast presence without San Francisco or LA pricing. Telecom providers peer here because Vegas sits at a network crossroads between California, Arizona, and Utah traffic.
The location itself matters more than it seems. Vegas isn't just gambling—it's become a legitimate tech hub with fiber routes connecting to major West Coast exchanges. The business district around LAS1 includes hotels and restaurants, which helps when you're coordinating multi-day migrations or troubleshooting hardware issues at 2am.
DataBank's acquisition of Zayo's datacenter portfolio in 2020 meant infrastructure upgrades and standardization across their facilities. For existing zColo customers, that transition brought improved support systems and broader network options. For new customers, it means you're dealing with a datacenter operator that has the financial backing to maintain and upgrade infrastructure rather than coast on aging equipment.
The facility handles everything from single-rack deployments to multi-cabinet installations. Power delivery scales based on density requirements, and cross-connects to major carriers are available on-site. Remote hands service runs 24/7 if you need someone physically rebooting hardware or swapping drives.
Network options vary by carrier, so confirm your preferred providers have presence before signing. Las Vegas has solid connectivity, but it's not as dense as major metros.
Cooling capacity matters if you're running high-density compute. The N+1 setup provides redundancy, but ask about power per rack limitations during peak summer temps.
👉 Explore datacenter infrastructure that balances power density with cooling efficiency
Compliance requirements are covered with SOC1/SSAE16 Type II, but if you need HIPAA, PCI-DSS, or other specific certifications, verify current audit status.
The facility works well for West Coast operations that need lower costs than California markets while maintaining decent network performance. It's less ideal if your primary user base is East Coast or international, where latency becomes noticeable.
For companies already operating in Vegas or expanding into Western markets, LAS1 offers legitimate enterprise infrastructure without the overhead of building your own datacenter. The DataBank backing provides stability, and the location delivers practical access to both physical facilities and network connectivity.