Chinese prefabricated electrical base reduces time and cost in data centers

Published on June 11, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

A Chinese company has developed a prefabricated electrical base for data centers that promises to change the game. The piece, which arrives ready from the factory, reduces construction time by 70%, required space by 30%, and total cost by 20%. Additionally, it can connect to green energy sources, which also lowers electricity expenses. A solution that directly targets the sector's efficiency problems.

Modular prefabricated electrical base being lowered into a data center construction site, robotic arms connecting color-coded power cables to server racks, green energy icons floating above the base showing solar and wind symbols, workers monitoring real-time efficiency metrics on transparent holographic displays, dramatic industrial lighting casting sharp shadows on metallic surfaces, compact footprint contrasting with traditional bulky infrastructure, photorealistic engineering visualization, ultra-detailed cable management systems, glowing energy flow lines tracing from base to servers, reduced construction clutter and scaffolding, cinematic wide-angle shot emphasizing space savings

Technical integration and energy savings in a single piece ⚡

The system is based on a modular design that integrates transformers, distribution systems, and electrical protections into a single sealed block. By arriving prefabricated, it eliminates the need for complex civil works and on-site wiring. Its architecture allows direct connection to solar panels or wind turbines, reducing grid consumption. The company ensures the unit meets international safety standards and can be deployed in weeks, not months. A technical advancement that simplifies the expansion of critical infrastructure.

The data center that arrives on a truck and without an instruction manual 🚚

The best part is that, by arriving ready from the factory, technicians save themselves the classic debate about whether the blue cable goes with the brown or the green one. The base promises to take up less space, so IT managers will no longer have an excuse not to fit more servers in the same room. And with the cost reduction, there might even be budget left over for pizza at the inauguration. Everything arrives prefabricated; only the coffee is missing.