Energy Compute Campus

Power, Space, and Connectivity — Turnkey or Land to Build On

A 500-acre, Gigawatt+ campus offering a full spectrum of infrastructure services — from fully managed colocation to powered land, powered shells, and carrier-grade connectivity — all on one integrated campus microgrid.

Gigawatt+ Generation
Compute-Ready Campus
Safety by Design
Long-Term Stewardship
Gigawatt+

Total Capacity

Phased delivery

500Acres

Campus Footprint

Master-planned site

24/7

Staffed Operations

Shift coverage & on-call

4

Core Programs

Safety · Security · EHS · Compliance

Campus Architecture

One Integrated System,
Not a Collection of Parts

Every domain — generation, interconnection, compute buildings, prefabricated modules, operations, and security — engineered to coordinate from day one.

campus-architecture.svg
UTILITY GRID CONNECTIONGrid Export / Import — Planned Future PhaseGENERATIONFACILITYTURBINEUNIT 1TURBINEUNIT 2TURBINEUNIT 3Natural Gas + GenerationELECTRICALINTERCONNECTIONSWITCHGEARXFMR YARDPRE-ENGINEERED BUILDINGSPrefabricated IT, Power & Cooling ModulesBLDG 1IT + Power+ Cooling ModsPhase 1BLDG 2IT + Power+ Cooling ModsPhase 2BLDG 3+ExpandableModule SlotsFutureCOOLING MODULESPrefabricated / RedundantN+1 and 2NPOWER MODULESUPS + PDU PrefabricatedModular ScalingINTEGRATEDOPERATIONS CENTERPLANTCONTROLCOMPUTEMONITORINGPHYSICAL SECURITYAND EHS OPERATIONSPERIMETERSECURITYCCTV + AccessOT / ITCYBERSECGovernanceFIRE &EMERGENCYResponseSITE UTILITIES AND SUPPORT INFRASTRUCTUREFUELSupply & StorageWATERSupply & TreatmentTELECOMFiber & NetworksROADS & SITEAccess & LogisticsADMIN& O&M BuildingHV PowerMV FeedMonitorPower FlowData / ControlSafety / SecurityFuture Phase

Conceptual diagram — illustrative only. Actual configuration subject to engineering and permitting.

Campus Microgrid Strategy

Not a Data Center with Backup Generators.

Conventional data centers treat utility power as primary and onsite generators as emergency insurance. At gigawatt scale, that model accumulates structural liabilities: utility queue exposure, fragmented distribution, and a backup-power architecture that does not extend cleanly to new phases.

Our campus microgrid approach starts differently. Two independent generation trains — each sized for the full critical campus load — feed two independent medium-voltage distribution rings. Every pod receives A and B feeds. UPS-backed critical paths deliver power to dual-corded IT loads. Both sources are live simultaneously. No transfer. No standby. One integrated campus power system.

Explore the Campus Microgrid
GenerationTrain A + Train B — each sized for full campus load
Plant BusCollection, protection, and metering at the plant level
MV DistributionCampus Ring A and Ring B — independent, campus-wide
Pod FeedsDedicated A and B medium-voltage feeds to every pod
Critical PathUPS A / UPS B — continuously energized
IT LoadDual-corded equipment — both sources live, always
Grid IntertieOptional — logically separate from critical continuity

What We Build

Four Pillars.
One Coordinated Platform.

Energy Compute Campus brings together the disciplines high-load digital infrastructure actually requires.

Energy Infrastructure

On-site natural-gas generation, high-voltage interconnection, fuel logistics, and power-quality management — designed for continuous, reliable load support at scale.

Compute-Ready Campus

Pre-engineered buildings and prefabricated IT, power, and cooling modules — enabling phased capacity delivery, rapid deployment, and flexible configuration.

Safe and Secure Operations

Permit-to-work, LOTO, EHS programs, physical security zoning, and OT/IT cybersecurity governance — embedded throughout the campus from design.

Long-Term Stewardship

Asset management, maintenance discipline, documentation rigor, and evidence-based readiness reviews that sustain reliability over decades.

Why Integration Matters

The Risks Are in the Gaps Between Systems

Most infrastructure failures do not arise from failed components. They arise from inadequate interfaces — between energy and compute, between safety programs and operations, between construction-phase thinking and long-term operating reality.

Energy Compute Campus eliminates those gaps by design. Every domain is planned, governed, and operated as part of a single coherent platform.

See How the Campus Works

Power and load release cannot be afterthoughts

Phased energization, load-step validation, and interconnection readiness must be coordinated from the start — not negotiated retroactively between siloed operators.

Safety must be designed in, not added on

Permit-to-work systems, hazardous-energy controls, and emergency response programs require integration with facility design, not post-construction retrofitting.

Operational authority must be explicit and tested

Who controls what, under what conditions, and through what escalation path — these questions demand clear answers before operations begin, not after incidents occur.

Long-term stewardship requires discipline from day one

Lifecycle documentation, maintenance regimes, and asset records that matter at year ten must be established at commissioning — not reconstructed from memory.

Commercial Framework

Universal Data Center Agreement Framework

All tenant agreements at Energy Compute Campus are executed under the Universal Data Center Agreement (DCAF) Framework — an open, standardized commercial structure covering both the Master Service Agreement (MSA) and Statement of Work (SOW). DCAF reduces negotiation friction, provides clear baseline protections for both parties, and reflects industry-standard expectations for colocation and managed infrastructure services.

Learn more about the DCAF Framework

Who We Serve

Built for Multiple Stakeholders.
Designed for Trust.

For Tenants

Purpose-built, phased capacity for hyperscale compute, AI/HPC workloads, and high-load digital operations. Coordinated onboarding and ongoing operational support.

Tenant Information

For Investors

A disciplined infrastructure platform with staged buildout, integrated operating model, governance rigor, and differentiated safety and compliance posture.

Investor Overview

For Communities

Responsible development, local workforce engagement, emergency coordination, and long-term community presence built on transparency and accountability.

Community Engagement

Safety & Security Programs

Designed in from day one

Permit-to-work and hazardous-energy control (LOTO)
Emergency response and crisis-readiness planning
Physical security zoning and credentialing
OT/IT cybersecurity governance
EHS program compliance and audits
Corrective-action tracking and readiness reviews

Program maturity, not just program existence ��� with evidence, records, and governance to support diligence and customer assurance.

Safety, Security & Compliance

Safety is Not a Checklist.
It's a Design Discipline.

At Energy Compute Campus, safety, physical security, and operational compliance are embedded into campus design, construction sequencing, and ongoing operations — not applied as a regulatory afterthought.

Our programs are structured, documented, and auditable. We maintain evidence of readiness — not just assurances of it.

View our Safety & Security Programs

Community & Responsible Development

Infrastructure Built to Last.
Developed with Integrity.

Large-scale energy and compute infrastructure has real impacts on the places where it is built. We take that responsibility seriously — as a fundamental operating principle.

Our approach to community engagement, workforce development, and environmental stewardship is integrated into how we develop and operate.

Learn about our community approach

Local Workforce

Skilled technical jobs, apprenticeships, and O&M training embedded in our operating model.

Transparent Development

Early and ongoing engagement with local stakeholders, regulators, and community leaders.

Emergency Coordination

Formal interfaces with local first responders and public safety agencies from planning through operations.

Long-Term Presence

We develop infrastructure we intend to operate and steward for decades — not flip on completion.

Ready for compute capacity at scale?

Talk to our team about tenancy, capacity planning, and phased deployment options.