Blackstone filed an S-1 on Thursday to take Bridge Data Centres public, targeting $2 billion in proceeds. The filing positions BDC as an acquisition vehicle for hyperscale data center assets, not an operating REIT. Schwarzman disclosed in parallel remarks that Blackstone now holds $150 billion in AI infrastructure across funds, with Bridge representing the firm's intent to securitize rollup capacity at scale.
Bridge was assembled over eighteen months through nine separate acquisitions in North America and Europe, concentrated in fiber-rich corridors near power substations. The S-1 lists 4.2 gigawatts of contracted capacity under long-term leases to hyperscalers, with 68 percent tied to investment-grade tenants. Blackstone Real Estate Partners IX and BREIT hold the underlying equity; the IPO carves out a publicly traded stub with governance that keeps asset allocation decisions at 345 Park Avenue. The filing shows trailing twelve-month EBITDA of $310 million on $890 million in revenue, implying a pre-money valuation near $11 billion if the deal prices at median data center REIT multiples.
The move matters because it puts a public mark on private AI infrastructure for the first time at this scale. Blackstone has been the largest aggregator of wholesale data center capacity since 2021, purchasing QTS for $10 billion and assembling Bridge from fragmented European and secondary U.S. markets where power availability preceded demand. The IPO is a bet that public markets will now price rollup platforms at a premium to single-asset REITs, rewarding acquisition velocity over stabilized yield. If the deal clears, it creates a currency for further M&A and establishes a comp set for KKR, Brookfield, and DigitalBridge, all of whom are sitting on similar portfolios built for private credit buyers or sovereign LPs.
Schwarzan's $150 billion figure is the tell. That includes QTS, AirTrunk in Australia, the European Bridge portfolio, and minority stakes in six other platforms. He told investors the portfolio can double from current levels without requiring new equity, relying instead on construction financing against pre-leased capacity. The IPO funds that engine. It also front-runs regulatory pressure in Europe, where data center energy consumption is drawing parliamentary scrutiny. A public vehicle allows Blackstone to point to transparent ESG reporting and lease disclosure, a hedge against the grid-access restrictions gathering momentum in Frankfurt and Amsterdam.
Operators should track the roadshow pricing in mid-Q2, likely targeting institutional buyers who missed the Equinix and Digital Realty rallies. If the deal prices above $12 billion, expect KKR to file within ninety days on CyrusOne's European arm. Watch also for power utility partnerships disclosed in subsequent 10-Qs; Blackstone has been negotiating co-location rights with Duke Energy and Exelon for new builds, which would appear as off-balance-sheet capacity once construction begins. The S-1 notes 1.8 gigawatts in shadow pipeline, implying those deals are already in documentation.
The filing lands the week Frankfurt pulled permits for two new hyperscale builds, and three weeks after Dominion Energy capped new data center interconnections in Virginia pending grid upgrades. Timing is the asset class.