Australian MSP Adisyn is exiting a data center in Perth, Western Australia.

The company, previously known as DC Two, announced it has negotiated a surrender of its Bibra Lake data center lease.

DC Two -- Bibra Lake DC, Perth Australia.png
Adisyn's Bibra Lake data center in Perth – DC Two

What was then DC Two launched the data center in May 2021. It leased the 5,000 sqm (53,800 sq ft), 3MW facility after prior tenants vacated before finishing the AU$10 million (US$7.7 million) project, leaving the landlord with an almost complete, design-accredited data center.

The company will exit the lease on 18 October - decommissioning and selling plant and equipment at the site - and said the move would result in approximately AU$350,000 in savings per year.

Adisyn will continue to offer data center services to new and existing customers via third-party data center providers and will look to relocate all existing profitable customers to an alternative data center in Perth, where they will continue to be serviced by Adisyn.

AI1 & Adisyn MD, Blake Burton said: "We're delighted with the outcome of our negotiations which will allow AI1 to reduce expenses while being able to deliver capital-light data center and cyber security solutions to our customers."

He continued: "In addition, it frees up time and resources to apply to strategic collaborations, including with 2D Generation, where we can use our learnings from data centers to develop data center and AI-related technologies to solve current industry challenges."

Adisyn also noted that the lease surrender indemnifies the company against any potential exposure to damages in a legal dispute between the lessor of the Bibra Lake site and Cannontech Technologies, in which Adisyn is also named as a defendant.

The issue is over "ownership of certain equipment located at the premises," but Adisyn will not take any further part in the dispute.

Adisyn was established in 2012, offering cloud services delivered from data centers in Perth and Darwin. The company also operated a 200kW facility in Osborne Park, in the northwest of Perth.

Last year the company changed its name and announced plans to shift away from providing data center and cloud services towards generative artificial intelligence solutions and microservices.

The company previously had a modular data center business, which was sold to DComm for AU$3 million (~US$2.02m) in February 2023.

Adisyn sold the VMware Cloud Assets of DC Two to local MSP Zettagrid earlier this year. Zettagrid said DC Two's cloud footprint in the Northern Territory capital of Darwin would be upgraded and become Zettagrid’s sixth Australian availability zone.

In July Adisyn announced a collaboration with 2D Generation, an Israel semiconductor IP business, around the development of high-performance, energy-efficient semiconductor solutions for AI and data centers.

Earlier this year DXN exited the lease of its Sydney data center nine years early.