A liquid-cooled data center built with its host,
returning its heat to the city.

The case, and the options on the table for
everyone in the room.
[Offtaker disclosure to confirm: named, described generically, or held back.]
We are pitching three candidate parcels. The River Site is our recommended anchor for 80 MW and the one we deep-dive next. None is locked; siting follows the power study.



Liquid cooling recovers heat at 40°C to 65°C (104°F to 149°F) and delivers it into useful systems.
Lead with thisPower secured below grid retail by sitting behind the meter and avoiding transmission, distribution, and capacity charges.
The commercial engineA long-term facility lease anchors the deployment on the partner's balance-sheet terms. No revenue share.
The anchorPUE measures how efficiently we consume. ERE measures the net, after the heat we return. We report them together, always.
ERE counts only heat delivered across the host boundary. With no offtake, ERE equals PUE.
The NVIDIA Cloud Partner reference architecture, GB200 NVL72 and NVL144 class.
Direct-to-chip liquid cooling and the CDU at the boundary.
District energy, and the heat host for the recovered warm loop.
The property, and how we propose to build it.
[Parcel specifics to confirm: area, control, power and heat-sink distances.]
A data center, a plant, and a public center with a greenhouse. Heat runs from the data center, through the plant, to the public center.



Three buses, sized so any two carry the full load. Dual-corded, 800 V ready, and behind the partner meter.


The CDU gallery is the boundary between the chip loop and the facility loop. Eleven units at N+1, on a reverse return for balance.


Chip, facility, and recovery loops meet at the CDU, so no central separation heat exchanger is needed.


Warm water off the rejection pumps passes a recovery heat exchanger metered to EN 1434, the point where recovered heat is counted before it reaches the partner. The dry coolers take the balance, so rejection is always available.

A single storey of 893 m² (9,610 ft²). Two halls in the centre, power and battery to the west, plant to the east, with the dry coolers carried outside.


80 MW built directly as four 20 MW data floors. A 20 MW opening phase remains optional. The power path is gated on the studies and confirmed land.
Separate from the build.
Themed on energy and heat recovery.
The data center stands on its own. The community work is its own commitment, connected only by the hot water that leaves the plant.
Controlled-environment growing on recovered heat, anchoring food access and training.
A working brewery on hot water, a visible civic draw and a skills program.
A neighborhood laundry on recovered heat, everyday utility for residents.
Community and office space, open to the neighborhood.
An interpretive floor with live energy data, built for school groups.
Recovered heat runs a controlled environment greenhouse at real scale. Shown here against a football field for size, and as the growing array the warm water can support.


The recovered warm loop runs a public conservatory through the cold months and feeds a community growing program on the forecourt.
[Named partners confirmed once engaged and with consent.]
Review the draft agreement and co-design the benefits with us.
Request the technical pack and align on integration.
Request the financial pack and discuss terms.