Google to Build Meitner Data Center in Texas with Over 1GW of Clean Energy and Housing for 3,500 Workers
June 4, 2026
Google to Build Meitner Data Center in Texas with Over 1GW of Clean Energy and Housing for 3,500 Workers
Google has announced plans to construct a massive new data center campus in the Texas Panhandle, marking one of the largest infrastructure investments in the region’s history. The facility, named the Meitner Data Center, is designed to support the company’s expanding cloud and artificial intelligence workloads while embedding sustainability and workforce housing into the project’s core design.
The data center will be located near the town of Pampa, Texas, and is expected to be powered by over one gigawatt of clean energy, sourced from a combination of on-site solar, wind, and battery storage systems. This energy capacity positions the Meitner campus among the largest renewable-powered data center projects in the United States, reflecting Google’s commitment to operating on 24/7 carbon-free energy by 2030.
In a move that underscores the growing intersection between hyperscale computing and community development, Google has also committed to building housing infrastructure for up to 3,500 construction workers during the build-out phase. The project, developed in partnership with energy infrastructure firm Intersect Power, aims to address the acute labor housing shortages often seen in remote construction zones, while also reducing the environmental footprint of worker commutes.
The facility is named after physicist Lise Meitner, continuing Google’s tradition of naming data centers after pioneering scientists. The Meitner campus will serve as a strategic hub for Google’s global network, handling high-performance computing tasks and latency-sensitive services. Industry analysts note that the project signals the growing importance of the Texas Panhandle as a data center corridor, driven by land availability, renewable energy resources, and favorable regulatory conditions.
The broader implications for the data center sector are significant. As hyperscalers like Google face increasing pressure to scale capacity while meeting net-zero targets, integrated projects combining energy generation, storage, and workforce accommodation are likely to become a template for future developments. This approach not only accelerates project timelines but also aligns with local economic development goals, creating a model for sustainable industrial growth in rural America.
Source: amarillo