The 281-acre site in Loudoun County, Virginia, in the process of being acquired by QTS. JLL
The 281-acre site in Loudoun County, Virginia, in the process of being acquired by QTS.

QTS Plotting Major Expansion in Northern Virginia Data Center Market

Company reportedly under contract to buy 280-acre plot as it starts construction on another site nearby

Data center provider QTS Realty Trust is plotting a major expansion in the booming Northern Virginia data center market.

Later this month, the company is expected to close acquisition of a 281-acre property in Loudoun County for $80 million, Washington Business Journal reported, citing anonymous sources. It also recently purchased a smaller, 23.5-acre site in Loudoun and already started construction there, a source told Data Center Knowledge.

The larger site, located where the Dulles Greenway meets Old Ox Road, is being marketed as Washington Dulles Gateway. The smaller site is at Prentice Drive and Broderick Drive, according to the source.

News of the expansion comes after another data center provider, Vantage Data Centers, announced last week a plan to build a $1 billion data center campus in the area, which has seen rapid growth of its data center sector, spurred by the need to expand capacity by large cloud service providers, such as Microsoft, Alphabet’s Google, and Amazon Web Services.

QTS already has data centers in the market: in Ashburn and Dulles. It also has a massive facility in Richmond, Virginia, about 130 miles south.

More data center capacity has been built and leased in recent years in Northern Virginia than anywhere else. In the first half of 2017 alone, companies absorbed 41.5MW of supply made available by data center providers, who “barely keep ahead of demand with the new deliveries that are consistently either substantially or fully pre-leased,” said authors of a recent market report by the real estate brokerage CBRE.

Iron Mountain recently launched the first phase of its data center in the market, while other providers, such as CloudHQ and Digital Realty Trust, have tens of megawatts of new capacity under construction.

Hide comments

Comments

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <blockquote> <br> <p>

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Publish