It’s massive
Which is why I questioned the idea of putting a comparatively tiny one where the Armory is
Which is why I questioned the idea of putting a comparatively tiny one where the Armory is
Perfect!GoHarvOrGoHome wrote: ↑2:14 PM - 23 days agoThat 1500 acre data center would take up nearly 4% of land in the city
Argument in STL city is more about location. No one would care if they built it in an industrial wasteland part of the city, people care when it goes in the middle of arguably the most booming part of the city, adjacent to rapid transit, the busiest bus line, a $10M addition to the greenway, and inside a building that had a subsidized redevelopment not even 10 years ago.jay23 wrote:Does anyone have an argument against building data centers? I've read the past couple months posts and I can't find a good reason for why we should not build them.
They need to get a out-of-city company to sign on to fill the space. If that can happen, I may be supportive. Need that first though, and I have high doubts on it happening.Chris Stritzel wrote:For the record, the Armory Building itself won’t become a Data Center. It’s slated to become office, as was Green Street’s original intent. The Data Center will go on the parcel occupied by the Famous Barr Warehouse.
But yes, putting it on the north riverfront, off Hall Street in particular, no one would really care. City would get whatever tax revenue and the data center “need” is fulfilled.
My bet too.dbInSouthCity wrote:I bet the armory never becomes an office building
Oh? Would this tenant be office or other?dbInSouthCity wrote: ↑11:19 AM - 19 days agoIt’s not because it won’t catch on, they have a legitimate tenant that’s ready to take it
So almost 10 years ago? Lmao.dbInSouthCity wrote:Pre covid
Have heard of this development taking place for some time. STL should jump on board and secure such developments and the corresponding tax revenues. Maybe not anything as big as a 900+ acre development, but smaller ones along the North Broadway Industrial Corridor are perfect sites. I care far less about the data centers themselves as much as I care about the revenue streams they can provide city coffers.Google said it is ready to outline community investments and infrastructure commitments tied to a data center project the tech giant plans in rural Missouri, about an hour from St. Louis.
Google said it will make an announcement next week about its planned investment in Montgomery County, marking a key milestone for the second massive data center planned in the county, west of St. Louis. The project would be located next to a site where Amazon previously committed to building a $35 billion data center.
Montgomery County officials have been working with Google on a proposed data center campus known as “Project Spade,” a large-scale development planned on more than 900 acres near the Interstate 70 and Highway 19 interchange. Materials published by Montgomery County describe a multi-building data center campus designed with closed-loop, non-evaporative air cooling technology intended to limit water use and reduce environmental impact. Data centers, including in the region, have faced pushback amid environmental and other concerns.