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It took 6 years to go from "save the planet" to "scale the servers" 🙄
🔥 Fuel Our Work: https://bit.ly/TFTPSubs 🎙 TFTP Podcast: https://bit.ly/TFTPPodcast
#TheFreeThoughtProject

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Why Hyperscale Data Centers Demand LOD 400 BIM From Day One
Texas has 6.5 gigawatts of data center capacity under construction — more than any other market in North America, and JLL projects it to pass Northern Virginia by 2030. Hyperscale data halls cannot be built without BIM coordination at a level most commercial firms have never touched: 2N redundancy that doubles every power and cooling path, hot/cold aisle thermal coordination, AI racks now hitting 100-plus kW, and LOD 400 from day one. Eagle BIM published a full guide to BIM for data centers Texas — system density, redundancy modeling, prefab, and what to put in the BIM execution plan. Read it: https://bim-services.us/bim-for-data-centers-texas/
Why Hyperscale Data Centers Demand LOD 400 BIM From Day One
Texas has 6.5 gigawatts of data center capacity under construction — more than any other market in North America, and JLL projects it to pass Northern Virginia by 2030. Hyperscale data halls cannot be built without BIM coordination at a level most commercial firms have never touched: 2N redundancy that doubles every power and cooling path, hot/cold aisle thermal coordination, AI racks now hitting 100-plus kW, and LOD 400 from day one. Eagle BIM published a full guide to BIM for data centers Texas — system density, redundancy modeling, prefab, and what to put in the BIM execution plan. Read it: https://bim-services.us/bim-for-data-centers-texas/
Why Hyperscale Data Centers Demand LOD 400 BIM From Day One
Texas has 6.5 gigawatts of data center capacity under construction — more than any other market in North America, and JLL projects it to pass Northern Virginia by 2030. Hyperscale data halls cannot be built without BIM coordination at a level most commercial firms have never touched: 2N redundancy that doubles every power and cooling path, hot/cold aisle thermal coordination, AI racks now hitting 100-plus kW, and LOD 400 from day one. Eagle BIM published a full guide to BIM for data centers Texas — system density, redundancy modeling, prefab, and what to put in the BIM execution plan. Read it!
Hyperscale Data centres: Scaling for the AI and Cloud Era
Hyperscale data centres are large facilities that support cloud and AI workloads at scale. They are designed to handle growing demand with infrastructure that can expand as requirements increase.
These facilities are still often discussed in terms of capacity and expansion, but they do not fully explain how these facilities scale today.
What has changed is not only the volume of demand, but also how that demand appears and what it requires from the underlying data centre infrastructure.
Changes are now visible in how facilities are designed, how hyperscale expansion strategies are planned, and why certain locations continue to attract more capacity than others.
Scaling Now depends on Decisions Made Much Earlier
Earlier designs assumed gradual growth, with capacity added over time. That assumption doesn’t hold in the same way now.
Now, in environments supporting AI infrastructure, demand often arrives at scale and runs for longer periods, at densities that existing systems were not originally designed to support.
At the start, the difference is not always visible.
A data centre may go live and operate as expected, with no clear indication of its limits. It becomes apparent later, once workloads increase and systems begin operating closer to capacity.
Power capacity that appeared sufficient starts to come under strain, and cooling systems are required to run more consistently.
Once a facility is operational, making changes to the underlying infrastructure becomes more difficult.
For this reason, hyperscale expansion strategies are evolving.
Expansion is no longer only about adding capacity. It also depends on whether the existing setup can support additional demand without introducing constraints.
Facilities, like the data centres at STT GDC India, handle increasing workload density and sustained demand more effectively and often have flexibility built into their initial design, including additional power headroom, scalable cooling systems, and infrastructure that can be expanded without major changes.
How Mumbai Fits into India’s Hyperscale Expansion
Capacity is growing across multiple cities in India, including Bengaluru, Chennai, and Hyderabad, where data centre development has been expanding steadily.
Data centres in Mumbai play a different role within this landscape, attracting strong interest from hyperscale operators due to their connectivity and the type of demand they support.
A large number of international subsea cables land in Mumbai, making it a key point for data entering and leaving the country. This supports lower latency for global workloads and enables applications that depend on stable connectivity.
Demand is also supported by the presence of financial institutions, many of whom are actively adopting AI infrastructure for use cases such as fraud detection, risk modelling, and real-time operations.
As a result, the need for reliable and scalable infrastructure is already established.
STT GDC India has expanded its presence in Mumbai over time, including facilities in Navi Mumbai designed for higher-density workloads. The Prabhadevi site is located close to cable landing infrastructure, aligning with connectivity requirements identified early in the planning process.
Many of these decisions were made before current demand levels became fully visible.
Why Capacity Alone Doesn’t Explain Scaling
Once a facility operates under sustained load, differences in performance become clearer.
Capacity figures, such as megawatt availability, provide a useful reference point. They offer a way to compare scale across facilities. At the same time, they do not fully reflect how a data centre performs when systems are running continuously.
Workloads driven by AI infrastructure do not follow cyclical patterns. Systems are required to operate consistently, often close to their limits.
Over time, there is sustained pressure on power and cooling systems.
Cooling is often one of the first areas where the effect becomes visible. Many operators are moving toward liquid cooling to support higher-density workloads. Outcomes depend not only on the technologies used, but also on how early these requirements were considered.
A similar approach can be seen in how some operators are building.
STT GDC India has been developing liquid cooling capabilities alongside expanding capacity across key markets. These are typically decisions made well before demand becomes visible.
What Scaling Really Looks Like Now
When infrastructure design, workload patterns, and location are considered together, a consistent pattern becomes visible. More than capacity, scaling also depends on when key decisions are made.
Power, cooling, connectivity, and location all matter, but timing often determines how well they hold up as demand increases.
Facilities that scale smoothly are not always expanding the fastest. In many cases, they are the ones where earlier decisions continue to support current requirements. In markets where demand is increasing quickly, this becomes easier to notice.
Some facilities take on additional workloads with minimal adjustment. Others need more time to adapt, often because the underlying infrastructure was not designed for that level of demand.
Scaling, in this context, depends on whether systems are prepared to support expansion without becoming a constraint.

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Vertiv, a global leader in critical digital infrastructure, announced the expansion of the Vertiv PowerBar Track busway family with Double-S
Vertiv has unveiled its scalable double-stack busway system—designed to deliver high-capacity, flexible power distribution for modern AI and hyperscale data centers. Built to support rising power densities and space constraints, the compact solution enables vertical scalability, live system reconfiguration without downtime, and optimized white space utilization, helping data center operators efficiently manage growing AI workloads while enhancing energy efficiency and operational agility.
The India Hyperscale Data Center Market is undergoing a transformational surge, driven by rapid digitalization, exponential data generation.
India’s hyperscale data center market is on a rapid growth trajectory, reflecting the country’s expanding digital economy. The market is projected to surge from around USD 8.11 billion in 2025 to USD 72.22 billion by 2035, growing at an impressive 24.4% CAGR, driven by rising cloud adoption, AI workloads, and massive data generation. As enterprises shift toward cloud-first strategies and digital services scale across sectors, hyperscale infrastructure is becoming the backbone of India’s data-driven future—unlocking new opportunities in high-performance computing, storage, and next-generation digital services.
Aurionpro Solutions Limited, is pleased to announce its largest-ever order win in the fast-growing data centre segment, secured from one of
Aurionpro has secured its largest-ever data centre order from a leading hyperscale operator, marking a major milestone for the company. The project involves the development of an AI-ready green data centre, covering design, engineering, and deployment of critical infrastructure to support high-density computing and next-generation digital workloads.