Denver Data Center and Office Facility Listed for $28M, Offering 267,000 Sq Ft and Expansion to 7MW
June 4, 2026
Denver Data Center and Office Facility Listed for $28M, Offering 267,000 Sq Ft and Expansion to 7MW
A mixed-use property combining data center and office space in Denver, Colorado, has been placed on the market for $28 million, signaling continued investor interest in secondary markets for digital infrastructure. The facility, located at a strategic point in the city’s growing tech corridor, offers 267,000 square feet of total space, with the potential to scale its critical power capacity up to 7 megawatts, making it a rare combination of operational capacity and expansion capability in the region.
The listing includes a fully operational data center component alongside traditional office areas, allowing for flexible use by colocation providers, enterprise users, or developers seeking to repurpose the site. The property’s existing infrastructure supports immediate deployment, while the headroom for power expansion positions it as a long-term asset in a market where data center supply remains constrained. Industry analysts note that Denver has emerged as a hub for cloud and edge computing, driven by its central location, fiber connectivity, and favorable energy costs.
The sale comes amid a broader trend of data center assets entering the commercial real estate market as operators and investors look to capitalize on rising demand for digital capacity. The $28 million price tag reflects both the physical asset value and the embedded potential for scaling, as hyperscalers and enterprises increasingly seek sites that can accommodate growing workloads without requiring greenfield development. The facility’s ability to reach 7MW of power capacity could serve mid-tier deployments or act as a backup site for larger regional hubs.
Real estate and data center industry observers view the listing as a test case for how mixed-use properties with data center components are valued in secondary markets. If the sale proceeds at or above asking price, it could encourage more owners of similar facilities to bring assets to market, potentially increasing liquidity in a sector that has traditionally been dominated by build-to-suit arrangements. The Denver property is expected to attract interest from both traditional data center operators and institutional investors diversifying into digital infrastructure.
Source: datacenterdynamics