April 9Apr 9 Other than the initial construction jobs, I don' think data centers add anything to our urban fabric or tax base. Most get some sort of tax abatement. They're located on the outskirts because land costs are cheap.
April 10Apr 10 Author 21 hours ago, Pablo said: Other than the initial construction jobs, I don' think data centers add anything to our urban fabric or tax base. Most get some sort of tax abatement. They're located on the outskirts because land costs are cheap. New Albany International Business Park land is not cheap. The New Albany Company has probably made close to $1 billion in land sales profit since 2016. Tax abatements are only for improvements. These companies are still paying what was being paid even with a 100% abatement. The construction and installation jobs don't go away when the centers are "complete". They've also bolstered our trades economy. The demand from these has forced upgrades and expansions of energy, transportation, and network infrastructure. Vertiv is a local company on the verge of becoming Fortune 500 largely because of these data centers. The trope that these only employ 30 is nonsense. Look at the aerial of the "completed" AWS site in New Albany. There are nearly 200 cars behind the gates. If these places had such high supply:demand of labor, their job boards probably wouldn't always have dozens of openings. I find it hard to believe that hundreds of communities across the US continue to lure and capture these investments with no benefit to the community.
April 10Apr 10 1 hour ago, aderwent said: The construction and installation jobs don't go away when the centers are "complete". They've also bolstered our trades economy. Yes and no. Construction jobs are short term work and transient. They rely on a steady state of work. If there isn’t enough work to sustain “new” jobs, then yes they will go away. Most likely they just draw resources not-locally. 1 hour ago, aderwent said: The trope that these only employ 30 is nonsense. Look at the aerial of the "completed" AWS site in New Albany. There are nearly 200 cars behind the gates. If these places had such high supply:demand of labor, their job boards probably wouldn't always have dozens of openings. I find it hard to believe that hundreds of communities across the US continue to lure and capture these investments with no benefit to the community. I would listen to this, it covered the topic pretty well. But basically, yes these don’t create many permanent jobs. And places around the country seek them out for different reasons, one of which is hoping to spur spinoff tech jobs. But that’s not going to happen everywhere. https://www.npr.org/transcripts/1242229718?ft=nprml&f=1242229718
April 10Apr 10 These data centers require constant maintenance and are changing quite a bit. I won’t get into details to bore people, but our local contractors who have national footprints and local footprints have to employ other people so it is ancillary jobs that are created. Yes, they may only say 30 but they probably employ 100+ if you include contractors.
May 26May 26 Author The Meta property is now fully engaged in site work all the way down to Morse Road. The QTS sites look like they'll be operational by year's end. The Microsoft property continues with land improvements. Amazon has many buildings under construction north of Central College on the East side of Beech. They're all multi level buildings. Now they're clearing the land on the West side of Beech up by 62. Driving the entirety of Beech is quite the site seeing trip. Especially with the Intel cranes visible on the northern stretch.
Thursday at 05:46 PM2 days Google continues its Central Ohio spending spree with $63M land purchase in New AlbanyGoogle has acquired nearly 85 acres in New Albany, the company confirmed to Columbus Business First.The tech giant paid $63 million for the property at 2565 Harrison Road NW. It purchased the land from DBT-Data, a real estate investment firm that develops data centers. DBT bought the parcel for nearly $1.6 million in January 2023, according to the Licking County Auditor.The Harrison Road property is about 4 miles from Google's existing data center campus at 1101 Beech Road SW.More below:https://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/news/2025/06/12/google-dbt-data-new-albany-data-center.html "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
Friday at 03:28 PM1 day Just did a loop around Beech, morse, harrison, beech to 161 and the construction is just incredible. Intel still had at least 10 cranes that i could count while driving and active construction. Has anybody seen anything definitive on how the delays will impact construction? Is it just a slower pace? Its hard to tell what a ton of the buildings on Beech and Morse are specifically but Amgen is well underway. Multiple data centers as well. Its certainly an impressive area and makes me excited for the continued growth. Hopefully we see some movement at Anduril in the fall. Gonna have to take a trip down there when they get moving.
Friday at 10:55 PM1 day 6 hours ago, Jd1137 said:Just did a loop around Beech, morse, harrison, beech to 161 and the construction is just incredible. Intel still had at least 10 cranes that i could count while driving and active construction. Has anybody seen anything definitive on how the delays will impact construction? Is it just a slower pace?Its hard to tell what a ton of the buildings on Beech and Morse are specifically but Amgen is well underway. Multiple data centers as well. Its certainly an impressive area and makes me excited for the continued growth. Hopefully we see some movement at Anduril in the fall. Gonna have to take a trip down there when they get moving.Next time you're in NA- try going 161 to Mink to Green Chapel to 62 to Beech. Once on Beech, take it tll you hit Jug. I would then take a stroll down Jug. Take Jug all the way back to Beech and take it all the way to Morse.That'll get you some good looks at most of Intel, a couple of the new tech parks, some of the Amazon and Meta stuff plus all the other projects on Beech.That entire loop is one giant construction zone, with dozens of projects all under construction at the same time! It is quite the site to see
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