Sabey Data Centers has completed phase one consultation work at its new campus in Texas.

The company has announced the completion of the first 430,000-square-foot (39,950 sqm) building at its new campus in the Round Rock area of Austin.

Sabey Austin
Sabey Austin – Sabey Data Centers

Round Rock officials first announced Sabey was coming to the Austin area in February 2022, saying the company intended to demolish the old Sears Teleserv building located at 1300 Louis Henna Blvd. The company officially announced the development in April that year and broke ground by July. It was originally due to go live last year.

The SDC Austin campus will offer up to 84MW of critical power capacity across two buildings at full build-out. Building A is designed to support liquid cooling and high-density computing environments with capabilities of up to 200 kW per cabinet.

Sabey noted the site has already attracted two large liquid cooling deployments/customers, including the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC). TACC will house Horizon, the largest academic supercomputer dedicated to open-scientific research in the National Science Foundation’s portfolio, at Sabey’s new campus.

"With our new Round Rock campus, Sabey reinforces its position as an industry leader delivering world-class data center facilities," said Rob Rockwood, president of Sabey Data Centers. "This investment in the Austin market provides enterprises and hyperscalers with sustainable, secure, and highly connected capacity to scale their digital operations."

“We are very pleased to announce the expansion of the SDC portfolio with the completion of the first building on our Austin data center campus,” said Jeffrey Kanne, president and CEO of National Real Estate Advisors and vice chairman of Sabey Data Centers. “The development of state-of-the-art facilities, such as SDC Austin, reflects our strategic commitment to investing in dynamic industries, capitalizing on sustainable opportunities, and striving to deliver strong returns to our clients.”

Sabey operates six data center sites across the US in Quincy, Seattle, and East Wenatchee, Washington; New York City; Austin, Texas; and Ashburn, Virginia.

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