Meta Breaks Ground on 1GW Indiana Campus in $10B+ AI Infrastructure Push
Original: Meta’s New Data Center in Lebanon, Indiana Marks a Milestone AI Investment View original →
Meta has begun construction on a new 1GW data center campus in Lebanon, Indiana, marking one of the company's largest infrastructure moves to date. The company says the project represents more than $10 billion in investment across data center build-out and surrounding community support. Strategically, this is not just additional capacity: it is designed to support both large-scale AI workloads and Meta's existing core product infrastructure at gigawatt scale.
Capacity strategy and compute implications
Meta describes the site as its second Indiana location and positions gigawatt campuses as essential for rising AI compute demand. At this size, the value proposition is flexibility: high-bandwidth, lower-latency, and more reliable infrastructure that can serve multiple workload classes without forcing separate build tracks for AI versus core services. In practical terms, that improves long-horizon planning for model training, inference growth, and platform resilience under peak demand.
Jobs and community commitments
The company estimates the site will support more than 4,000 construction jobs at peak and roughly 300 operational roles once online. Meta also announced a Boone County workforce development program with local school districts, focused on career exploration and work-based learning. Beyond workforce initiatives, the company committed $1 million per year for 20 years to the Boone REMC Community Fund for direct energy-bill assistance, alongside emergency water utility support through local partners.
Infrastructure and sustainability package
Meta says it will invest more than $120 million in local public infrastructure, including water systems, roads, transmission lines, and utility upgrades. On energy, the company states the campus will be matched with 100 percent clean energy and is targeting LEED Gold certification. On water, the site is planned with a closed-loop liquid-cooling design intended to recirculate water and use zero water for much of the year. Meta also says it will restore 100 percent of consumed water locally, including projects with Arable in the Upper Wabash River Basin designed to restore 200 million gallons annually for ten years.
The broader signal is clear: AI competition is increasingly an infrastructure competition. Data center scale, energy procurement, cooling efficiency, and local permitting credibility now sit alongside model performance as core strategic variables. Meta's Indiana campus shows how hyperscale AI investment is being packaged as a combined compute, sustainability, and community-economics program rather than a standalone technical deployment.
Related Articles
Meta announced a multi-year infrastructure partnership with AMD, targeting up to 6GW of AMD Instinct GPU capacity for AI workloads. The agreement also aligns roadmaps across silicon, systems, and software, with first deployments expected in the second half of 2026.
Meta and NVIDIA officially announced a multiyear, multigenerational strategic partnership on February 17, deploying millions of Blackwell and Rubin GPUs alongside the first large-scale Grace-only CPU deployment—part of Meta's $600B US investment commitment by 2028.
NVIDIA announced a multigenerational strategic partnership with Meta on February 17, covering millions of Blackwell and Rubin GPUs, the first large-scale Grace CPU deployment, and WhatsApp privacy computing via NVIDIA Confidential Computing.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!