TRG Datacenters Begins Construction on New 24 MW Data Center Expansion in Houston for Growing Tech Demand
Date Published

TRG Datacenters has begun construction on a new 24‑megawatt data center expansion at its Spring-area campus, marking one of the largest builds of its kind currently underway in the Houston region. The project reflects a surge in demand for high-density computing capacity driven by cloud services, artificial intelligence workloads, and the city’s growing base of tech-enabled businesses.
The expansion, located in northwest Houston near major energy and engineering corridors, will add significant power and floor space to TRG’s existing facility. Company leaders say the project is designed to support both enterprise clients and emerging technology firms that need reliable, scalable infrastructure without leaving the Houston metro.
Construction is now underway, with phased delivery expected to begin in 2025. Once complete, the site will accommodate high-performance workloads for industries including energy, healthcare, research, logistics, and finance—sectors that increasingly rely on advanced data processing and analytics.
Why it Matters for Houston
Houston’s tech ecosystem has grown rapidly in recent years, with AI adoption, digital transformation, and startup activity all accelerating. The addition of 24 MW of capacity strengthens the region’s competitiveness by keeping compute resources local and reducing reliance on out-of-state data centers. That means lower latency for businesses, more flexibility for Houston-based IT teams, and new infrastructure to support innovation.
The project is also expected to generate construction jobs in the short term and long-term technical roles once the facility opens. For local businesses, especially those in energy and medical research, the expansion offers upgraded data center options without the cost of building or managing their own infrastructure.
What’s Next
TRG Datacenters plans to continue scaling its Houston footprint as demand increases. The company has signaled interest in additional phases at the same campus, depending on customer needs and regional power availability. With major technology investments accelerating across Texas, Houston is positioning itself as a strategic hub for enterprise and AI computing.
This article is a summary of reporting by the Houston Business Journal. Read the full story here.
