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AI data centers have crossed into municipal-scale infrastructure, with emerging facilities approaching or exceeding 1 GW of power demand — roughly double the peak draw of Buffalo, New York. NEMA, ASHRAE, and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory just launched the AI Data Center Energy Performance Framework to fill the code gaps that formal standards can't address fast enough. For developers, contractors, capital partners, and investors, the implications reach well beyond building construction into power procurement, workforce strategy, and supply-chain resilience.
Key Takeaways:
For modular and industrialized construction practitioners, the signal is clear: data center clients are arriving at modularization not out of preference but out of necessity, driven by labor scarcity and the imperative to reduce project-to-project variability at unprecedented scale. Contractors and developers who have already built standardized, repeatable delivery systems for MEP-heavy facilities are positioned to capture a disproportionate share of this pipeline. The interconnection queue and workforce supply chain remain the watchable constraints — whoever solves speed to power and skilled-labor access wins the next decade of this market.
Subscribe to Built Different for daily updates on Modular construction reality.
By Spring Street Management GroupAI data centers have crossed into municipal-scale infrastructure, with emerging facilities approaching or exceeding 1 GW of power demand — roughly double the peak draw of Buffalo, New York. NEMA, ASHRAE, and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory just launched the AI Data Center Energy Performance Framework to fill the code gaps that formal standards can't address fast enough. For developers, contractors, capital partners, and investors, the implications reach well beyond building construction into power procurement, workforce strategy, and supply-chain resilience.
Key Takeaways:
For modular and industrialized construction practitioners, the signal is clear: data center clients are arriving at modularization not out of preference but out of necessity, driven by labor scarcity and the imperative to reduce project-to-project variability at unprecedented scale. Contractors and developers who have already built standardized, repeatable delivery systems for MEP-heavy facilities are positioned to capture a disproportionate share of this pipeline. The interconnection queue and workforce supply chain remain the watchable constraints — whoever solves speed to power and skilled-labor access wins the next decade of this market.
Subscribe to Built Different for daily updates on Modular construction reality.