Sabey starts work on second data center at Texas campus in Austin

First phase of new facility due live in 2027


Sabey Data Centers has started work on a new data center at its campus in Austin, Texas.


The company this week announced that construction is underway for Building B at its campus in Round Rock.


The three-story facility is designed to deliver 54MW of power capacity, with the first 18MW expected to be Ready for Service in Q3 2027. The facility is available for pre-leasing.


Sabey said that, like the first building at the Austin campus, the new data center will be able to offer liquid cooling and support densities of up to 200kW per rack.


“As we continue to expand our national footprint, launching construction on Austin B represents an important milestone in serving one of the country’s fastest-growing technology markets,” said Tim Mirick, president of Sabey Data Centers. “The Round Rock facility is purpose-built for flexibility and efficiency, and it offers an ideal home for forward-thinking customers with evolving density needs.”


A joint venture between Sabey Corporation and National Real Estate Advisors, Sabey Data Centers operates more than four million square feet of data centers across the US, with sites in operation or development in Quincy, Seattle, and East Wenatchee, Washington; New York City; Austin, Texas; Umatilla, Oregon; and Ashburn, Virginia.


First announced in early 2022, the company launched the first phase of its SDC Austin data center campus in Round Rock in October 2024. Based on the site of a former Sears Teleserv building located at 1300 Louis Henna Blvd, the campus will offer up to 84MW of critical power capacity across two buildings at full build-out.


The company is also reportedly looking to develop another campus in Texas outside Austin. According to filings, Sabey is seeking to develop some 786 acres in the city of San Marcos, though further details haven’t been shared.

Read Also
SAMA Expands CPU Cooling Lineup with A60 and A40 Series Air Coolers
Meta taps PIMCO, Blue Owl for $29 billion data center expansion project, source says
Joule, Caterpillar, and Wheeler Announce an Agreement to Power America’s Growing Data Center Energy Needs

Research