Data centres do not slow down. They do not sleep. They do not tolerate interruption. Their environments must operate continuously, predictably and efficiently, with little margin for error and even less for delay.
While much of the focus is placed on architecture, connectivity and power, there is a second system working in parallel, one that underpins performance across every part of the site. This crucial system is facilities management.
In high-capacity, high-risk environments, the expectations placed on FM are specific, technical and non-negotiable. Services must support uptime, protect energy efficiency, reduce risk and provide verifiable assurance across infrastructure, systems and people. That requires depth of capability, clarity of method and a delivery model aligned to the realities of the sector.
A sector defined by continuity and control
Data centres operate to narrow tolerances. They are expected to maintain uptime close to 100 percent, with no disruption to power, cooling, security or access. In most facilities, performance is benchmarked against Tier standards (such as those from the Uptime Institute) or regulatory codes (such as EN 50600 and ASHRAE TC9.9).
The demands placed on FM teams reflect this. They must be able to manage live environments, support system resilience, deliver preventive maintenance and ensure safe, auditable operations — often across multiple sites and regions.
OCS provides hard FM services to more than 100 data centres worldwide. These include hyperscale campuses, colocation facilities and enterprise environments. Each contract is structured around continuity, technical performance and compliance. Services are self-delivered wherever possible, allowing for tighter control over safety, scheduling and standards.
Technical compliance and operational structure
A defined set of standards governs facilities management in data centres. These include:
Service delivery follows recognised industry standards. These include BS 7671 for electrical installations, BS 5839-1 for fire detection systems and BS 6266 for fire protection in IT environments. White space cleaning is carried out in line with ISO 14644-1, and maintenance planning is based on SFG20 schedules. Equipment is serviced in line with manufacturer guidance to support performance and reliability.
Alongside these are broader certifications that support quality, safety, energy and information security, including ISO 41001, 50001, 27001, 22301, 9001, 14001 and 45001.
The strategic role of FM is further supported by ISO 41014, which defines how facilities services align to business objectives and asset lifecycle planning.
OCS engineers work under controlled method and operations procedures. All maintenance is logged in a central CMMS. Task lifecycles are tracked from scheduling to closure, with asset-level data available for reporting, audit and risk analysis.
Energy usage and sustainability performance
Power usage effectiveness (PUE) and carbon usage effectiveness (CUE) are now standard metrics across the sector. Facilities teams play a direct role in maintaining and improving these, both through operational practices and infrastructure-level optimisation.
OCS supports this through:
- ISO 50001 principles applied to task planning and reporting
- BMS-integrated thermal control and monitoring
- Preventive maintenance of HVAC, containment and cooling systems
- Sustainable procurement and materials management
- Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions tracking across estates
- Social value metrics aligned to TOMS, where required
Data is made available through structured dashboards and reports, supporting internal governance and customer ESG frameworks.
Risk control and system continuity
Continuity is maintained through planning, trained teams and structured incident response. OCS applies risk-led maintenance strategies based on asset criticality, failure history and load demand.
Engineers are authorised for live-site operations and trained for scenarios including emergency shutdown, fire detection activation, utility loss and generator failover. Each site maintains a documented MOP, SOP and EOP library. All activity is supported by PTW and LOTO procedures.
Post-event investigations follow a structured root cause analysis process, with task or schedule changes issued accordingly.
Integrated systems and performance data
Technology plays a central role in how FM is delivered. OCS uses integrated platforms to plan, execute and assure performance across every contract. These include:
- CMMS for task management, SLA tracking and asset history
- BMS, EPMS and DCIM systems for live data and capacity insight
- Real-time dashboards for energy, compliance and service performance
- Digital audit trails for training, incident reporting and governance
System integration ensures that performance is not only delivered, but recorded and understood in context.
Teams structured for technical environments
Data centre FM requires teams with specific capabilities, maintained consistently over time – this includes electrical authorisation, system-level training and understanding of how the environment is designed to function.
OCS delivers this through a structured training and certification programme supported by the OCS Academy. Competency records are linked to site requirements and updated in real time. Escalation frameworks ensure coverage at all times, with 24/7 engineering support and access to Authorised Persons where required.
A quiet constant in a rapidly moving sector
As the sector continues to scale at speed, data centres are becoming more integrated into national infrastructure, critical industries and the digital economy. Demand will increase. So will energy scrutiny, security requirements and regulatory complexity.
New technologies will continue to shape how environments are monitored, how services are delivered, and how performance is measured. But the need for continuity will remain constant.
Facilities management will not always be the focus. It is rarely visible. But it remains essential to what the sector values most — operational certainty, infrastructure longevity and service without interruption.