On-Prem

Nope. You probably can't cash in by turning your office or farm into a datacenter

Bit barn developer says your real estate can't take the heat, and forget nuking it to change that


APRICOT Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but if you own real estate and think you can cash in by using it to host an AI datacenter, you're probably wrong.

That's the opinion of Billy Lee Kok Chi, chairman of Malaysian datacenter builder and operator CSF Advisers, as expressed on Wednesday during the closing plenary of the Asia Pacific Regional Internet Conference on Operational Technologies (APRICOT) in Kuala Lumpur.

In his talk, Lee shared the questions he's often asked about the suitability of different facilities to be repurposed as AI datacenters that require 230 kW of available energy per rack. Here's our summary of the types of land he's often asked about, and his assessment of whether they can be used to house a bit barn.

Multi-story commercial building

99 percent likelihood of noncompliance because the floors aren't strong enough to hold fully loaded racks, layout restrictions mean you can't get enough racks inside, and there's insufficient space for mechanical and electrical services that keep datacenters cool and power flowing.

Empty land in a city center

80 percent chance it won't be feasible due to high land and construction costs. Datacenters also don't need to be near customers, so investors won't be keen.

Existing large industrial factory

70 percent likelihood of compliance, because factories allow flexible layouts, robust flooring, and probably have plenty of space for mechanical and electrical services.

A 40-acre-plus (16+ hectares) plot in the suburbs

65 percent chance of success, with timely upgrades to power and data infrastructure the biggest challenges.

200 acres (80 hectares) of land in a rural area

60 percent chance of success, if data connectivity and power are available.

Enterprise datacenter or colocation facility built before 2022

50 percent chance of successful conversion because they're already designed to be datacenters and may have the headroom that allows denser racks and higher power consumption.

Large warehouse or logistics facility

40 percent chance of success as major modifications will be required, and power supply constraints are likely given the facility was designed for less energy-intensive uses.

Land near a power transmission station

In 80 percent of cases you can't get power directly from the transmission station, and may end up having to source it from far away. So it is not a great option.

Rural land next to a power transmission line

50 percent chance of viability depending on whether the passing power line has capacity. If it does, you'll need to build a voltage switchyard to bring juice to a datacenter.

Rural land next door to another property that has a power transmission line running through it

Not viable as the power line would need to cross your neighbor's private land to reach your plot and that won't happen.

Any sort of land in a nation that is fast-tracking datacenter approvals

50 percent chance of success because infrastructure upgrades may not be ready in time to meet demand.

Lee also pointed out that the next generation of AI datacenters will be enormous and vastly complex.

He said CSF Advisers has been asked to create a design for a gigawatt-scale datacenter, and came up with a plan that will require 634 acres (256 hectares) of land, almost 300 of which are devoted to a solar farm and batteries. Additionally, the facility will need a large voltage switching yard, and a large outdoor reservoir to store all the water needed for cooling.

Lee also commented on colocating nuclear power plants and new datacenter builds, and said that's not a feasible approach because it takes a decade or more to build a reactor. The investors funding the $50 billion-plus pipeline of datacenter builds he currently sees in Malaysia alone won't wait for nuclear plants to come online. ®

Send us news
33 Comments

Regional Internet Registries work to prevent one of their own going rogue

There's a lot going on at the orgs who regulate IP addresses as they revisit global governance and new leadership comes to APNIC and LACNIC

Our world faces 'unprecedented' spike in electricity demand

And it's not just datacenters driving the need for 3,500 TWh of new energy generation by 2027

If you dip your toes into immersion cooling, watch out for dielectric liquid sharks

The small pool of suppliers understand their market power

Intel cranks up accelerators in Xeon 6 blitz to outgun AMD

But you're probably not cool enough for Chipzilla's 288-core monster

Euro cloud biz trials 'server blades in a cold box' system

Hot air or a 50% energy saving? Exoscale datacenter runs proof-of-concept to test veracity of Digger's claims

Despite Wall Street jitters, AI hopefuls keep spending billions on AI infrastructure

Sunk cost fallacy? No, I just need a little more cash for this AGI thing I’ve been working on

ST Micro skips in, arm in arm with AWS, bearing a chip for 1.6 Tbps pluggable optics

It's Friday. Quit the doomscrolling. Distract yourself with IT infra news

Cash torrent pouring into Nvidia slows – despite booming Blackwell adoption

May we all have problems like annual revenue growth dropping from 126 to 114 percent

Like a kid handing in homework at the last minute, Supermicro finally files its missing financial figures

SMCI had to come up with long-delayed report – or lose its slot on NASDAQ again

Satya Nadella says AI is yet to find a killer app that matches the combined impact of email and Excel

Microsoft CEO is more interested in neural nets boosting GDP than delivering superhuman intelligence

If you thought training AI models was hard, try building enterprise apps with them

Aleph Alpha's Jonas Andrulis on the challenges of building sovereign AI

Datacenter energy demand in bitbarn 'capital of the world' Virginia nearly doubled in second half of 2024

Dominion Energy already eyeing another 26 GW worth of datacenter demand