ORIGINATION: Cloverleaf Infrastructure proposes 300-acre expansion of 1.12 GW data center campus in Monroe County, GA
- Total site would exceed 1,200 acres
- The development represents a USD 1.12bn investment at full buildout
- Monroe County officials will consider the expansion proposal in September
Cloverleaf Infrastructure, through subsidiary Rum Creek DevCo LLC, has proposed a 300-acre expansion of its planned 1.12 GW Rumble Technology Park data center campus in Monroe County, Georgia.
The expansion would increase the site to more than 1,200 acres, which the developer told Bisnow will allow for the data centers to be more spread out and reduce impacts to wetland areas.
The development was first approved in November 2024 with the rezoning of 525 acres from Agricultural and Conservation Use to Commercial to permit data center development. The rezoned acreage was part of a larger 948-acre site at the southeastern quadrant of I-75 and Rumble Road intended for the project, according to state and county filings.
The original proposal was filed by Datacore Innovations LLC, but the project is now being led by Cloverleaf Infrastructure through its subsidiary Rum Creek DevCo LLC. Property owners listed in the initial filing included Diastole LLC, Madura Properties LLC, and Prime Places LLC, with JVA Acquisitions LLC added in the expansion proposal.
Plans included:
- The construction of up to 12 buildings totaling 4.2 million square feet (ten 300,000-square-foot buildings and two 600,000-square-foot buildings)
- 10 buildings requiring 80 MW of power and two buildings requiring 160 MW, for a combined total of 1.12 GW
- An estimated 2 million gallons per day (MGD) of water supply demand and 0.03 MGD of sewage flow generation, both to be provided by Monroe County
- A projected 4,158 trips per day in traffic generation
- The project’s completion scheduled for December 2038
At the time of the original proposal, state filings show the development represented an estimated USD 1.12bn investment at full buildout, with a USD 20m projected annual local tax revenue, according to state filings.
It’s unclear how the additional acreage will affect site design, utility planning and timeline.
Cloverleaf Infrastructure manages land acquisition, zoning and utility preparation for the sites, to hand over ready-to-build sites for data center users and providers, according to the firm.
The Monroe County Planning and Zoning Board and Board of Commissioners are scheduled to vote on the expansion Sept. 2 and 9, respectively.
Cloverleaf did not respond to a request for comment.
The developer is also currently expanding and advancing a more than 1,900-acre, 3.5 GW data center campus in Port Washington, Wisconsin, where Vantage Data Centers has been identified as one of several expected operators.
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