Deep underground in Butler County, the Iron Mountain National Data 
Center functions like its own little city. With more than 3,000 badged 
employees, the former mine has its own fire department, restaurant, 
transit systems, water treatment center, and medical center. (Justine 
Coyne/Pittsburgh Business Times).
But what may be most surprising about this unique facility, located 
outside of Pittsburgh in Boyers, is the treasures that are stored 
inside.
Formerly a limestone mine owned by United States Steel Corp.
 (NYSE: X) in the early 1900s, today the mine houses everything from 
original prints of classic motion pictures, to data storage for more 
than 2,300 business and government agencies across the U.S.
Located 220 feet underground, Nick Salimbene,
 director of business development for Iron Mountain, said what makes the
 facility so unique is that it is virtually impervious to natural 
disasters. Salimbene said being housed underground also provides a 
stable environment that naturally maintains a temperature of 52 degrees.
Of the 145 acres that are developed, Salimbene said about 70 percent 
is used for physical storage. But demand is shifting toward more data 
storage. He said the demand for data storage has been increasing between
 20 percent and 30 percent annually in recent years. Today, he said 
about 80 percent of what is coming into the center today is data.
For the privacy of its customers, Iron Mountain does not disclose who
 uses the Boyers facility by name. But it includes many big names. One 
tenant Salimbene could discuss is Corbis Corp., which houses its collection of over 20 million photographs .
"There's a little bit of everything here," Salimbene said. "But the 
most important thing for us, is that our customers feel secure having 
their items located here."
Obviously, with such valuable objects in its facility, security is very tight at Iron Mountain, with armed guards keeping watch 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
"We have companies trusting us with their most valuable assets," Salimbene said. "That's not something we take lightly."
 
 
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