- IT Office Moves
Server Room Setup for Your New Office: A Planning Guide
11 Mar, 2026
£1832.63 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The NVIDIA RTX PRO 4000 (Blackwell) is one of those cards that makes sense if you’re doing real, compute-heavy work day in day out—think professional GPU rendering, serious DCC workloads (3D, motion graphics), AI-assisted tasks in a business workflow, or workstation builds where stability and drivers matter more than chasing the cheapest render-per-pound. At £1527.19 ex-VAT, it’s not “impulse upgrade” pricing, so you’ll want to be confident you’ll actually use the performance and reliability the PRO line is bought for. If you’re billing time for rendering or you’ve got a pipeline that noticeably speeds up with GPU acceleration, it can pay for itself quickly; if not, it’s easy to burn money on capability you won’t fully leverage.
I’d avoid it for typical “office + a bit of CAD” systems or light content work where a midrange card would do 90% of the job without the cost shock. Also, if this is going into a budget workstation, make sure the rest of the build won’t bottleneck you—CPU, RAM, storage speed, cooling, and the power/physical fit matter more than people think. This is for teams standardising workstation performance and support expectations; if you’re just experimenting or running occasional projects, look cheaper first, because ROI at this price hinges on frequent, GPU-driven workloads.

Asus
PRIME-RX9070-O16G

HP
NVIDIA RTX A1000 - Graphics card - RTX A1000 - 8 GB - 4 x Mini DisplayPort

Asus
ASUS GT1030-2G-BRK - Graphics card - GF GT 1030 - 2 GB GDDR5 - PCIe 3.0 low profile - HDMI, DisplayPort

Lenovo
NVIDIA RTX 4000 Ada - Graphics card - RTX 4000 Ada - 20 GB GDDR6 - PCIe 4.0 x16 - 4 x DisplayPort