The PoP complements ongoing regional fibre investments, enabling carriers and enterprises to scale network capacity more efficiently.
Customers gain reliable access to Arelion’s full ecosystem of AI, content, cloud, gaming, and streaming services, supporting workloads that require high bandwidth and predictable performance. The move also bolsters economic development by facilitating growth in Oklahoma’s emerging AI and cloud sectors.
Oklahoma City has recently attracted significant tech investment, including a $9 billion data centre initiative by Google, reinforcing the region’s appeal for high-capacity digital infrastructure.
Arelion’s PoP adds a secure, resilient connectivity option for local enterprises, offering services such as Dedicated Internet Access (DIA), IP Transit, Cloud Connect, scalable Waves, Ethernet, and DDoS mitigation.
RACK59, one of Oklahoma’s premier colocation facilities, provides robust power infrastructure, redundant connectivity, and seven layers of security, making it ideal for energy-intensive AI and cloud workloads.
The partnership ensures enterprises can deploy AI applications with confidence, supported by diverse intercity fibre routes and scalable network architecture.
Art Kazmierczak, Arelion’s director of strategic sales and network development described the expansion as a strategic move to “provide high-capacity backbone connectivity that enables emerging applications and ensures predictable performance.”
Margie Williams, RACK59’s GM, added that the collaboration strengthens customers’ ability to run bandwidth-intensive workloads across the region’s growing technology ecosystem.
The new Oklahoma City PoP positions Arelion to meet rising demand for enterprise-grade AI connectivity, delivering a robust, low-latency network option for businesses seeking to leverage North America’s AI-driven digital economy.
RELATED STORIES
Arelion and Aruba unveil new data centre partnership in Rome
Arelion expands Texas network with new AI-ready diverse mesh routes

Datacloud Energy 2026
After a standout 2025 edition, we’re back with an even sharper focus on the intersection of data centres, energy, and ESG. As power demand rises and regulations evolve, there’s a growing urgency to rethink how infrastructure is powered, financed, and built for long-term impact.





