The GridCore Platform

One Platform. Every Layer of the Campus.

GridCore coordinates land, power, buildings, modular infrastructure, cooling, connectivity, safety, security, operations, and commercial delivery as one governed data center campus platform — from first site plan through decades of steady-state operation.

8

Platform Layers

Site through commercial delivery

Any

Power Strategy

Utility, generation, storage, hybrid

Any

Scale

Container zone to hyperscale campus

Governed

Coordination Model

Fewer gaps, clearer accountability

Platform Architecture

Eight Layers. One Coordinated System.

Most campuses are assembled from separate contractors, separate management systems, and separate accountability structures. GridCore treats all eight layers as a single governed platform — designed together, delivered together, operated together.

Site & Land

Campus land acquisition, site control, permitting, environmental, zoning, and civil design — selected for power access and scalability.

Power Strategy

Utility-fed, grid-interactive, self-generation, islanded, or hybrid. Power architecture is selected per site — not assumed.

Buildings & Infrastructure

From containerized modules to purpose-built hyperscale buildings. Shell, MEP, cooling, and structural — delivered to spec.

Modular Compute Infrastructure

Prefabricated compute modules, power distribution, and cooling integrated with the building envelope as a coordinated system.

Connectivity

Carrier-neutral fiber, MMR, backbone routing, and demarcation — designed into the campus from the start, not retrofitted.

Safety & Security

PTW/LOTO, PSM, EHS, physical security, OT/IT governance, and compliance frameworks built into the operating model.

Operations

Defined authority matrices, maintenance programs, incident response, tenant escalation, and lifecycle KPIs from day one.

Commercial Delivery

Powered land, powered shell, turnkey colocation, or connectivity — structured for the tenant's operating model, not one size.

Platform Differentiators

What Makes GridCore Different.

The market has no shortage of land, buildings, or power companies operating independently. GridCore defines how they work together — with documentation, safety, and governance as core platform outputs, regardless of which entity operates each layer.

Coordinated, Not Fragmented

Power, land, buildings, operations, and commercial delivery governed under one structured model — fewer gaps, clearer accountability, regardless of which entities occupy each role.

Governed From Day One

Operating procedures, authority matrices, and compliance evidence programs are built before first energization — not added later.

Power-Flexible

No assumed utility dependency. Each site's power strategy is evaluated and designed — utility, generation, storage, or combined.

Repeatable

The same framework applies from a single container deployment to a multi-hundred-megawatt campus — same model, different scale.

Ownership and Operator Flexibility

Designed for Multiple Ownership Models.

GridCore does not prescribe who owns the land, the power infrastructure, the buildings, or the operating company. It defines the framework that governs how those parties coordinate.

Developer-Led Campus

A single developer controls land, infrastructure, and operations. GridCore provides the planning and governance discipline across all layers.

Utility or Energy Partner Campus

A utility, generator, or energy company provides power infrastructure. A separate operator delivers compute capacity. GridCore governs the interface.

Investor-Backed Program

Capital partners fund development and infrastructure. An operating company manages delivery. GridCore provides the shared framework both sides rely on.

Third-Party Campus Operator

Any qualified operator can implement the GridCore model — not just GridColo. The framework is designed to be transferable across operators and geographies.

Evaluating a GridCore platform deployment?

We work with developers, operators, hyperscalers, and investors evaluating new or existing campus sites. Start with a site and capacity discussion.