About
Netrality Data Centers operates a carrier-neutral colocation and interconnection facility at 11102 Grand in Kansas City, KS — a critical-infrastructure environment where electrical system reliability is non-negotiable. For facility managers and property owners overseeing high-density commercial or institutional buildings in the Kansas City metro, this type of data center operation represents the gold standard for power redundancy and electrical continuity planning. Facilities of this class typically rely on robust medium-voltage power distribution, redundant switchgear, paralleled UPS systems, and standby backup generators sized to sustain full critical load during utility outages. Panelboard and breaker infrastructure must be maintained to exacting standards to prevent costly downtime across colocation tenants and interconnected enterprise clients. The Kansas City location positions Netrality within a strategically connected Midwest hub, supporting multi-tenant commercial buildings, government facilities, institutional campuses, and mixed-use developments that require carrier-diverse low-voltage and data infrastructure. Interconnection services at this facility enable direct cross-connects between networks, reducing latency and improving uptime for tenants housed in adjacent commercial and industrial properties throughout the region. Electrical systems supporting colocation environments demand continuous monitoring, scheduled preventive maintenance on transfer switches and generator sets, and rigorous NEC compliance across all distribution equipment. Facility managers evaluating colocation or interconnection options in Kansas City will find that Netrality's 11102 Grand location anchors a resilient power and connectivity ecosystem suited to office, institutional, and government-grade uptime requirements. For commercial electrical contractors serving this market, the infrastructure demands of a carrier-neutral data center — from switchgear coordination to UPS battery management — reflect the highest tier of power reliability expected across Kansas City's growing commercial real estate portfolio.