Cloverleaf seeks to expand Rumble Technology Campus in Georgia

Company taken over site from Date Core Innovations


Data center powered land provider Cloverleaf is developing a campus in Georgia.


The 12-building, 4.2 million sq ft (390,192 sqm) Rumble Technology Campus was first proposed back in September 2024.


At the time, Data Core Innovations was filing to develop the 900-acre site in Monroe County, and got the green light from the Monroe County board of commissioners to rezone large parts of the land from agricultural to industrial in November.


Construction work on the $1.2 billion project was reportedly due to start in late 2025 or early 2026, with the first building launched in 2028. The site is set to be built out in phases through to 2038 or 2039.


Cloverleaf Infrastructure has seemingly now taken over the site, and is looking to expand the overall acreage of the campus – though the amount of planned data center floorspace is seemingly set to remain the same.


This week BisNow reported that Cloverleaf has refiled the DRI application for the project with the state of Georgia via its Rum Creek DevCo LLC affiliate.


The company wants to acquire an additional 325 contiguous acres off Rumble Road to spread out the data centers on the site and avoid impacting wetlands on the greenfield site.


The property owners are listed as Diastole LLC, Madura Properties LLC, Prime Places, LLC, and JVA Acquisitions LLC. The application also refers to the site as the Rumble Technology Park in places instead of campus.


Founded last year by Brian Janous, the former head of energy at Microsoft, Cloverleaf is a developer of large-scale digital infrastructure sites powered by low-carbon electricity. Rather than building its own data centers, the company ensures sites are fully zoned and have the required power for other developers to then build data centers on.


The company secured $300 million in funding from private equity investors NGP and Sandbrook Capital in July. It is developing a large plot in Port Washington, Wisconsin, which Vantage is reportedly interested in taking over.


Atlanta, traditionally a Tier 2 market, has quickly become a major hotspot for data center development. DRI applications for more than a dozen campuses, totaling tens of millions of square feet across dozens of buildings, have been filed over the last couple of years.


While many are in Atlanta’s traditional data center heartland around Fulton County, applications have been filed for projects across the Peach State.

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