Apparently, the squeezed lemon still has a little juice left, because the Multacom saga continues. Just weeks after we covered Multacom’s landlord lawsuit at the Aon Center, followed by a look at how the company’s routing picture appear noticeably different than what many longtime customers remember, another development has surfaced.
This time, it comes courtesy of LowEndTalk user @cu_olly, who shared what appears to be a customer migration notice announcing that Multacom is rebranding under the Digital Space name while relocating its remaining infrastructure.
The destination?
6171 W Century Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90045.
If that address sounds familiar, it should.
Back To The Crime Scene?
Just over a year ago, 6171 W Century Blvd became a frequently talked-about address in the hosting industry after QuadraNet’s financial troubles spilled into public view.
The now-defunct QuadraNet (owned by Edge Centres, who also owns Multacom), became the subject of landlord litigation last year tied to that facility. Customers found themselves caught in the middle, and providers utilizing QuadraNet infrastructure scrambled to relocate services.
That makes the latest twist especially strange: Multacom is also part of the Edge Centres orbit, and now the Multacom infrastructure is apparently being moved back into the former QuadraNet facility. What exactly is their strategy behind all these migrations and rebrands here?
At the time, Edge Centres’ strategy appeared to be the opposite of today’s announcement. Some of its infrastructure was consolidated away from 6171 W Century Blvd and into Multacom’s footprint at the Aon Center.
Fast-forward to today, Multacom itself is now facing an active landlord lawsuit at the Aon Center over alleged unpaid rent exceeding $400,000.
The company is rebranding to Digital Space.
And customers are now being asked to migrate…
…back to 6171 W Century Blvd.
Hosting certainly has a sense of irony.
The Migration Notice
According to the post on LowEndTalk, Multacom customers received the following notice:
“Dear Client,
As part of our ongoing transition from Multacom to Digital Space, we are writing to inform you of an upcoming physical relocation of our legacy infrastructure.
Your services are scheduled to be migrated out of the existing facility to our new location:
New Facility Address: 6171 W Century Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90045
Migration Window: Between July 6th and July 14th, 2026.
Please note that this move will be handled automatically by our engineering team to ensure continuity. Unless you contact us directly to inform us that you have made alternative arrangements, your services will be moved to the new facility according to this schedule.
If you have any questions or need to coordinate specific technical requirements regarding this move, please reply directly to this email as soon as possible.”
Customers are told the migration will occur automatically unless they have already made alternative arrangements.
Providers… Moving Again?
One interesting consequence of all this is the impact on downstream providers.
Several providers (such as RackNerd) have already left Multacom entirely, and will not be further impacted by this. Others stayed, endured previous infrastructure moves, and renumbered customers after IPv4 renumbering changes.
Now, some of those same providers (and their customers) may find themselves preparing for yet another migration.
Infrastructure moves are part of this industry. But multiple facility moves, IP renumbering events, rebrands, and active litigation all within a relatively short period of time are considerably less common.
The Timeline Keeps Growing
To save everyone from digging through multiple LowEndTalk threads, LET user @cu_olly also posted what is probably the best summary of the saga so far:
2023: Multacom joins the “Edge Centers” data center group.
2024: Multacom sells swathes of its owned IPv4 addresses to raise capital and renumbers thousands of clients.
2024: Edge Centers acquires CloudCone, a long-standing colo customer.
2024: Edge Centers acquires Quadranet and plans to merge QN clients into Multacom’s suite in the Aon Center.
2025: Quadranet financially collapses; multiple LA landlords sue, lock their suites, and evict them.
2025: Edge Centers confirms pretends it is financially sound and that the Quadranet issues amount to simple consolidation, moving operations from 6171 W Century and 530 W into the Aon Center.
2025: Edge Centers formally enters liquidation in its home country of Australia.
2025: Multacom fails to pay power and rent to the Aon Center landlord.
2026: The Multacom landlord begins legal proceedings.
2026: Multacom acquires digitalspace.com and rebrands under the Digital Space moniker to avoid lawsuit fallout.
2026: Multacom is sued by the Aon Center landlord.
2026: Multacom offers select clients migration to “new” facilities due to “restructuring.”
2026: Multacom announces it is closing its “legacy” Aon Center space and moving into the former Quadranet facility at 6171 W Century Blvd.
Looking back over that sequence of events, it’s remarkable how much has happened in just a few years.
A Different Lens
In our last article, we noted that some members of the LowEndTalk community were beginning to view RackNerd’s earlier departure from Multacom through a different lens.
At the time, that migration may have looked like a disruptive facility move. But today, with Multacom rebranding, the landlord lawsuit still active, and yet another infrastructure relocation underway, some community members understandably view those earlier departures differently.
Likewise, CloudCone has publicly stated on LowEndTalk that it no longer shares ownership with Multacom/Edge Centres and that it continues monitoring the situation closely. That distinction matters, though it does not completely remove CloudCone from the story. CloudCone still appears to be hosted through Multacom in Los Angeles, at least from public routing and prior comments. Whether CloudCone still has physical infrastructure inside 707 Wilshire specifically is unclear.
In other words, CloudCone may not share ownership with Multacom anymore, but its Los Angeles operation still appears tied to Multacom’s network/facility ecosystem in some form. That makes the Digital Space migration notice worth watching for CloudCone customers as well.
Taken together, these developments paint a much different picture than they did just a few weeks ago.
The Lemon Keeps Dripping
None of this necessarily means customers should panic.
Facilities move. Infrastructure gets consolidated. Companies rebrand. Those things happen.
But context matters. Customers have watched one Los Angeles datacenter brand owned by Edge Centres (QuadraNet) become the center of a landlord dispute last year. Now they’re watching another, and the irony is that they are moving back to the same spot QuadraNet was evicted from last year.
The Multacom name may be fading, but the story certainly isn’t. We’ll continue following both the migration and the court proceedings as they develop. Every hearing, filing, and migration announcement helps paint a clearer picture of where this story is ultimately headed.
Some observers will naturally wonder whether the Digital Space rebrand is an attempt to move away from the baggage now attached to the Multacom name, including the active landlord lawsuit at the Aon Center. Maybe it is. Maybe it is simply part of a longer-planned corporate transition.
Either way, a new name does not automatically erase the old questions. If the same ownership group, corporate structure, or infrastructure relationships remain involved, then customers and creditors are likely to look past the logo and ask what has actually changed.
If you’re attending future hearings, receive any other migration notices, obtain court filings, or have information to share, feel free to send us a tip!
Something tells us the squeezed lemon hasn’t quite stopped dripping yet.





















Leave a Reply