TRG Expands Houston Data Center Campus

Delivery is expected in the fourth quarter of 2026.

Photo at the groundbreaking ceremony of TRG Data Center's project in Spring, Texas.
Industry leaders and project partners attended HOU2’s groundbreaking ceremony. Image courtesy of TRG Datacenters

TRG Datacenters has started construction on HOU2, its second data center in its campus in Spring, Texas, near Houston. The 24-megawatt facility totaling 110,000 square feet is slated to become operational in the fourth quarter of 2026.

Project partners include Thomas Craig Construction, Encore Concrete Construction, Walker Engineering and HTS. CenterPoint Energy will serve as power supplier.

Upon delivery, HOU2 will feature cabinet-to-cage colocation, adaptable data halls, over 120-kilowatt per-rack capability and closed-loop, dry-chiller cooling.


READ ALSO: Builders of the Boom: Top 10 Data Center Developers


TRG Datacenters’ first Houston facility, HOU1, came online in 2018 and has maintained 100 percent uptime since its delivery. The 45,000-square-foot property is at 2626 Spring Cypress Road, 12 miles south from The Woodlands data center cluster.

The 10-acre campus features redundant power feeds and 16 on-campus carriers. Amenities include conference rooms, a kitchen, a break area and secure parking spots, as well as semi-truck loading docks.

Tallvine Partners purchased TRG earlier this year. Expansion plans include entering additional Texas markets as well as other metros in the country.

Data center development ramps up in Texas

As AI data center demand keeps growing, the industry experiences never-before-seen activity in both construction and investment.

Just a few days ago, Texas entered the nation’s spotlight as Google announced plans to spend $40 billion there for cloud and AI infrastructure, the firm’s largest capital commitment in any state. Plans include the construction of three new data center campuses, among others.

Elsewhere in the Lone Star State, a $25 billion data center project is currently underway. Developed by Vantage Data Centers, the 1.4-gigawatt campus, dubbed Frontier, spans 1,200 acres and is the company’s largest data center investment to date.