FluidStack
Network Engineer, BMS/EPMS Networks
New York, NY$150k–$203kfulltimemidAdded today
About this role
Fluidstack is seeking a Network Engineer to design and operate facility networks (BMS/EPMS) across massive AI compute data centers. You'll own the operational technology layer, implement secure OT segmentation, and standardize network deployments across gigawatt-scale sites while partnering closely with controls engineers.
What you'll do
- Own facility network architecture for BMS, EPMS, and controls systems across multiple sites
- Design segmented, secured OT networks that maintain operational integrity while enabling vendor integrations
- Develop standardized facility network reference designs for consistent multi-site deployment
- Manage the OT/IT boundary including firewalls, monitoring, and access controls for uptime and compliance
- Implement zero-touch provisioning and automated link validation to enable rapid site turnup
- Collaborate with controls engineers and operations teams to ensure network reliability
What they're looking for
- OT/Industrial network design and operations
- BACnet/IP and controls protocols
- Network segmentation and security architecture
- OT/IT boundary management and firewalls
- Data center facility networking
- Automation and ZTP (zero-touch provisioning)
- IEC 62443 standards
- Controls systems integration
Opens the official application on the employer’s site. No login required.
FluidStack
FluidStack builds AI infrastructure at scale, developing data centers and warehouse operations designed to handle gigawatt-capacity compute deployment. The company is hiring for warehouse engineers, data center operations specialists, product engineers, and people leaders to support rapid infrastructure expansion across multiple sites.
- Website
- fluidstack.io
Likely interview questions
- Tell us about an OT network you've built—what protocols did you support and how did you handle real-time constraints?
- Describe a time you implemented network segmentation in an operational environment; how did you balance security with the needs of controls engineers?