The site, based in Slough, uses 75 supercomputers to serve more than 5.5 billion page views to fans of the 2010 World Cup.
The site will offer two petabytes (2000 gigabytes) of video streaming bandwidth which, according to Fifa.com, is twice the storage required to render the recent movie blockbuster Avatar.
"Slough was the natural choice for Fifa.com to house its additional bandwidth requirements. The state-of-the-art venue offers security and will ensure rapid delivery of the online experience to fans", said Matt Stone, head of new media at Fifa.
From Slough, Fifa.com will be distributed globally to tens of thousands of servers which then send content to users from the closest location via a content delivery network, which aims to reduce network latency, by pushing the web pages closers to where users are accessing them.
This article was first published by Computer Weekly