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Google's Infrastructure Boom Continues: Expansion Ahead in Oregon

Google is not done with its extraordinary data center building boom. The company is preparing for an expansion of its data center campus in Oregon and will likely file permits to build additional data centers on its property in The Dalles.

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Google is not done with its extraordinary data center building boom. The company is preparing for an expansion of its data center campus in Oregon and will likely file permits to build additional data centers on its property in The Dalles.

"We're getting our ducks in a row so that, should we decide to expand, we can move quickly," wrote Kate Hurowitz, a Google spokeswoman in California, in an e-mail to The Oregonian. Google's expansion plans were first reported by The Dalles Chronicle. Google has three data center buildings at The Dalles, which was the first company-built data center campus. Last year Google did a "rip and replace" upgrade of the electrical infrastructure to boost its server capacity. But that's clearly not enough, as the company now indicates it may seek permits to build two more data centers on the property it owns in The Dalles, where the company has access to cheap land and power on the banks of the Columbia River.

The news comes on the heels of a string of data center expansion announcements in 2013, in which Google has committed to pump $2 billion into expansions of existing data center campuses. The expansion announcements include:

The scope and acceleration of Google's data center construction program makes it clear that the company sees massive growth ahead in its Internet businesses. Google is fanatical about data, and closely tracks the growth and utilization of its infrastructure. As this construction spending begins to enter the pipeline, Google's capital expenses on servers and data centers has soared past $1 billion per quarter. The three expansion announcements in April suggest this spending will increase in coming months.

Google's 2013 building boom represents the largest investment in data center infrastructure in the history of the Internet, eclipsing the company's initial burst of projects in 2007. Google is not alone. With yesterday's announcement of a new project in Iowa, Facebook is now building new data centers in four markets, while Apple is commencing build-outs of massive server farms in Nevada and Oregon, and Microsoft has announced new facilities in Virginia and Wyoming.

What do these huge expansions tell us about the future of Internet infrastructure? Big data means big data centers. All the data we generate each day  - as we write and receive emails, watch videos, upload photos and create PowerPoint presentations - must live somewhere. Much of it will reside in the massive server farms of the cloud builders. Much more of it will live in smaller data centers around the nation and the world, within reach of "server huggers" in enterprises and small businesses.

How much is the Internet growing? For Google, the answer is clearly "more."

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