A computing campus on Longfellow Ranch, in Pecos County, Texas.

Project Horizon is being developed approximately 30 miles southeast of Fort Stockton on a 559-acre footprint within the Longfellow Ranch. Here is an overview of the campus design, on-site power generation, cooling architecture, and operating footprint.

Schematic rendering of the Project Horizon campus on Longfellow Ranch: long, low data center buildings on a wide West Texas plain with hills on the horizon.
Project Horizon campus, schematic rendering. The site occupies approximately 559 acres within Longfellow Ranch.

On this site

  1. Water

    All campus water is sourced from non-potable groundwater, within existing permitted water allocations. The campus does not draw from the City of Fort Stockton's municipal supply. The cooling architecture is closed-loop liquid-to-chip, in which coolant circulates in a sealed loop and is not consumed during operation.

    Read more about water →
  2. Power

    Day-to-day electricity for the campus is generated on the property using behind-the-meter natural gas generation. The campus operates on its own generation rather than drawing daily load from the public grid. A grid interconnection is maintained for backup reliability.

    Read more about power →
  3. Workforce

    The campus is designed to be staffed predominantly from the regional labour market, with workforce training developed in coordination with local technical training providers. Construction workforce housing and permanent operations housing are provided directly by the project.

    Read more about workforce and operations →
  4. Site & footprint

    The 559-acre operating footprint sits within an approximately 500,000-acre working ranch in unincorporated Pecos County. The campus is sited so that day-to-day mechanical operations are not audible from any populated area, and access to the site is via a low-traffic road from the highway.