Type | Public company |
---|---|
NYSE: COR S&P 400 component | |
Industry | Real estate investment trust |
Founded | 2001 | (as CRG West)
Headquarters | Denver, Colorado, U.S. |
Key people | Robert G. Stuckey, Chairman Paul E. Szurek, President & CEO Jeffrey S. Finnin, CFO |
Products | Data Centers |
Revenue | $572 million (2019) |
$99 million (2019) | |
Total assets | $2.100 billion (2019) |
Total equity | $213 million (2019) |
Owner | The Carlyle Group (22.4%) |
Number of employees | 464 (2019) |
Website | www |
Footnotes / references [1] |
CoreSite Realty Corporation is a real estate investment trust that invests in carrier-neutral data centers and provides colocation and peering services. As of December 31, 2019, the company owned 23 operating data center facilities in 8 markets comprising over 4.6 million net rentable square feet. The properties are in Boston, Chicago , Denver, Los Angeles , Miami, New York City , Northern Virginia, San Francisco /San Jose, California, Santa Clara, California, and the Washington, D.C. areas.[1] The company has over 1,350 customers including enterprises, network operators, cloud providers, and supporting service providers.[1]
The company was founded in 2001 as CRG West at two of the West coast's original carrier hotels: Market Post Tower and One Wilshire.[2]
In August 2005, the company opened a facility in Washington, D.C.[2]
In May 2007, the company acquired properties in Boston and Chicago.[3] It also purchased a tract of land in Santa Clara, with the intent of developing a 50-megawatt data center Coronado campus there.[1]
In September 2007, the company announced the expansion of services at its Los Angeles facility.[4]
In November 2007, the company announced the expansion of services at its Miami facility.[5]
In January 2008, the company acquired a data center in Reston, Virginia.[6]
In June 2009, the company changed its name to CoreSite.[7][1]
In September 2010, the company became a public company via an initial public offering.[8]
In April 2012, the company acquired Comfluent and entered the Denver market.[9][10]
In August 2012, Coresite became the first AMS-IX enabled data center operator in North America.[11]
In October 2013, the London Internet Exchange (LINX) chose CoreSite's Northern Virginia data center campus as one of the locations for its first North American peering exchange, LINX NoVA.[12]
In May 2016, The Carlyle Group reduced its effective interest in the company to 28.9%.[13]
In July 2016, Tom Ray, the chief executive officer of the company, retired with Paul Szurek, lead independent director, to succeed Tom Ray as president and CEO.[14][15]
In August 2016, the company announced the expansion of services at its Reston, Virginia facility in conjunction with the $60 million acquisition of the 22-acre Sunrise Technology Park from Brookfield Office Properties.[16][17]
In February 2017, the company announced the expansion of services at its Washington, D.C. facility.[18]
On May 4, 2017, the company received a contract from Voxility for a large colocation deployment in Coresite’s Los Angeles and Northern Virginia data centers campuses.[19]
In October 2019, CoreSite was named a Winning "W" Company by 2020 Women of Boards for achieving at least 20% women on its corporate board before the year 2020.[20]
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)
|publisher=
(help)