ProHoster.Info is widening its footprint in Central and Eastern Europe with a new batch of dedicated servers now running out of Gdansk. The company is positioning this expansion as part of a longer push to strengthen infrastructure in regions where hosting demand has grown steadily and often quietly over the past few years. While the hosting market across Europe remains crowded, Poland has emerged as a location that businesses increasingly see as a practical midway point between Western Europe and the Baltics.
The company’s latest rollout focuses on delivering higher performance hardware for workloads that have outgrown shared environments or need predictable computing power. Engineers involved with the project say the interest in Poland has increased alongside the rise of latency sensitive applications, including gaming, real time analytics, and ecommerce platforms that serve users in multiple European markets. By placing servers in Gdansk, ProHoster can shorten routes for clients that want to keep traffic inside the EU while staying close to several major exchange points.
According to spokesperson Adrian Keller, the team has been preparing the move for some time. He noted that Polish data centers have reached a level of stability and connectivity that appeals to a wide range of organizations, particularly those that want infrastructure anchored in a Tier III facility. The Gdansk location uses redundant power, multiple carriers, and cooling systems that match standards expected from larger European hubs.
The servers rely on a mix of Intel and AMD processors, along with storage options built around SSD and NVMe drives. Clients can scale memory up to 512GB, which gives the new lineup enough flexibility for analytics tools, backend services, or applications that simply need room to grow. While the focus is on reliability, the company has also added layers of DDoS protection and monitoring to keep outages from spreading.
This action mirrors a change over time of the businesses’ preference for the data hosting places. While a greater number of businesses are attempting to balance the factors of speed, compliance with privacy regulations, and costs, places such as Gdansk have turned into feasible substitutes for well-established Western European centers. According to ProHoster, the move to Poland is just one aspect of their overall strategy to provide clients with more local options as their need for network resources keeps changing.
