QTS Realty Trust announced a $10 billion data center campus in Van Wert, Ohio, a rural municipality of fourteen thousand people now positioned at the center of North American AI infrastructure buildout. The commitment represents one of the largest single-site data center investments on record and arrives as hyperscalers exhaust runway in traditional markets. Van Wert city leadership confirmed the project after years of site preparation, though QTS has not disclosed anchor tenants or construction timelines.
The campus footprint and power allocation remain undisclosed, but $10 billion in capital expenditure suggests multiple buildings totaling several hundred megawatts of critical IT load. QTS operates a portfolio of roughly 8 million square feet across North America, concentrated in metros like Atlanta, Chicago, and Northern Virginia. Van Wert represents a deliberate pivot to greenfield sites with available power and fiber infrastructure—two inputs now rationed in coastal markets. Ohio's deregulated energy market and proximity to natural gas supply lines lower operating expense, while state-level tax incentives for data center developers have sharpened since 2021. The announcement follows similar mega-campus commitments in secondary markets: Meta's $800 million expansion in DeKalb, Illinois; Microsoft's $3.3 billion spend in Racine, Wisconsin; Amazon's multi-site buildout across Indiana and Ohio.
This matters because the site selection reveals constraint geography. Northern Virginia, the world's largest data center market, now faces substation waitlists extending past 2027. Phoenix and Dallas contend with water scarcity and grid reliability questions. QTS chose Van Wert not for workforce density or fiber count, but for something simpler: it can deliver power at scale without five-year permitting cycles. Allocators tracking infrastructure debt or equity should note the margin structure—rural sites sacrifice some colocation revenue density in exchange for lower land cost, faster time-to-market, and sovereign risk mitigation. The $10 billion figure likely includes grid upgrades and substation builds, meaning a portion flows to utilities and engineering firms rather than construction or IT equipment. Operators who financed coastal campuses at 5.5 percent debt yields in 2021 now face refinancing into a world where greenfield projects in Ohio command institutional capital at similar spreads, compressing returns across the sector.
Watch for three follow-on events. First, anchor tenant disclosure within 90 to 120 days—hyperscalers typically require naming rights in exchange for long-term leases, and silence suggests either pre-leasing negotiations or speculative development risk. Second, Ohio Public Utilities Commission filings on interconnection capacity, expected within six months if QTS intends to energize the first phase by late 2026. Third, secondary-market land acquisition announcements from peer operators—Vantage Data Centers, CyrusOne, and Digital Realty have all indicated appetite for similar plays. If QTS secures anchor commitments without material delays, expect competitive site control within 150 miles of Van Wert before year-end.
The $10 billion is not the story. The story is where it goes, and what no longer fits in Virginia.