Lancium Clean Campus for AI Data Centers

Hall County, Texas

Lancium is actively developing multiple gigawatt-scale AI data center campuses. Our flagship campus is in Abilene, TX, with additional campuses under development in Childress County and Hall County, TX — each designed to advance scalable, energy-efficient AI infrastructure without burdening the communities that host it.

Hall County Campus, May 2026

ERCOT Approved

Powering AI Responsibly at Gigawatt-scale

At Lancium, we specialize in energy technology and infrastructure that enables large gigawatt-scale data centers to seamlessly interconnect with the power grid. The Hall County campus is anchored by a 1GW interconnect advancing through ERCOT’s rigorous, formal interconnection review in collaboration with transmission service providers — ensuring our operations support grid reliability with no negative impact to local power consumers.

The Hall County Clean Campus reflects how we believe AI infrastructure should be built — at gigawatt-scale, drawing on our own on-site wells rather than the community’s water, with full grid reliability and a genuine partnership with the people of Hall County. 

We’re proving the world’s largest data centers can also be the most responsible neighbors.”

— Michael McNamara, Co-Founder & CEO, Lancium

Water Neutral

Sustainable Prosperity

All Lancium Clean Campuses require closed-loop cooling systems that ensure minimal environmental impact. These closed-loop systems continuously recirculate water, meaning once filled, they require no additional water for the life of the project. This innovative approach helps conserve valuable water supply.

Lancium and our partners are dedicated to responsible development and environmental stewardship. To protect local ecosystems and waterways, we have implemented a Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP) at the campus, ensuring proper containment and compliance with environmental best practices.

The Hall County Clean Campus will draw its water from dedicated on-site groundwater wells. It is not connected to and places zero demand on Hall County’s municipal water system.

The water that serves Hall County’s homes, schools, and businesses stays exactly where it belongs — with the community.

Our campus brings its own water source, just as it brings its own purpose-built power infrastructure.

Our Community Commitment

Lancium and QTS are committed to bringing the highest standard in data center campus development to Hall County. Both organizations are deeply committed to ensuring the development will benefit all stakeholders in the community. QTS and Lancium are committed to open, ongoing communication with residents and will coordinate regular public meetings with community leaders.

The data center will use a closed-loop cooling system that is required at all Lancium Clean Campuses. The system does not consume any water for cooling once it is operational, significantly reducing water usage compared to traditional cooling methods. Once the data center is operational, water from on-site wells will be used for typical building needs such as restrooms, kitchens, cleaning, and landscaping—similar to any other commercial building.

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