Netrality owns and operates carrier-hotel buildings in major US network hubs — 1102 Grand in Kansas City, 717 Texas in Houston, 401 N Broad in Philadelphia. These are interconnection-dense meet-me locations, the kind of buildings where networks aggregate. The differentiator isn't square footage; it's the density of carriers and networks you can cross-connect to inside the building. If interconnection is the requirement, Netrality is the conversation.
Netrality operates colocation inside carrier hotels — landmark interconnection buildings in key US metros where networks physically converge. The value is the cross-connect ecosystem: being in a building dense with carriers and networks means short, cheap, low-latency connections instead of backhaul. For organizations whose primary constraint is reaching many networks efficiently — content, networking, finance, anyone building meet-me topologies — the interconnection density leads, not the floor space.
Content, networking, financial, or service-provider teams that need to cross-connect to many carriers and networks inside one building.
If your design depends on aggregating networks in a hub building, Netrality's carrier-hotel positioning is the value-add.
If your priority is direct private connections into the major clouds, CoreSite's cloud on-ramp density may fit better. Worth comparing.
If you need large blocks of dense compute capacity rather than interconnection, a hyperscale campus is the shape. Brief one of those instead.