Datacenter Projects in Washington
Track 65 active and announced datacenter projects in Washington — roughly 1,100 MW of capacity, 14 announcements in the last 24 months, and ~$11B in committed investment.
Top Submarkets in Washington
- ▪Quincy
- ▪Moses Lake
- ▪Seattle
- ▪Redmond
- ▪Wenatchee
Active Operators & Hyperscalers
Notable Washington Datacenter Campuses
Want a real-time feed of new datacenter projects in Washington?
SUPPLYCO's AI agents monitor permits, EDA filings, and hyperscaler press to surface projects the moment they're announced.
Datacenter Construction in Washington
Central Washington's Quincy cluster, powered by Columbia River hydro, hosts massive Microsoft, Sabey, and Vantage campuses while the Seattle/Redmond metro anchors enterprise and cloud control-plane facilities.
Washington is currently tracking roughly 65 active datacenter projects across operational sites, builds under construction, and recently announced campuses, representing an estimated 1,100 MW of IT load capacity. Over the last 24 months, 14 new large-scale projects have been announced statewide, with approximate aggregate investment of $11B. The state is categorized as a secondary market for North American datacenter activity.
Top Datacenter Markets in Washington
Datacenter construction in Washington is concentrated in Quincy, Moses Lake, Seattle, Redmond, Wenatchee. These submarkets attract activity because of available high-voltage transmission capacity, large industrial-zoned land parcels, favorable tax abatements, and existing fiber routes connecting to major peering hubs.
Major Operators and Hyperscalers Building in Washington
Operators with significant presence or active builds in Washington include Microsoft, Sabey, Vantage, Cyxtera, T5, H5. Each operator runs a distinct procurement model — hyperscalers (AWS, Microsoft, Google, Meta) typically award national MSAs to a short list of general contractors and self-perform commissioning, while colocation providers (Digital Realty, Equinix, QTS, Aligned) source more locally and award trade-by-trade.
Notable named projects and campuses in Washington include: Microsoft Quincy campus, Sabey Quincy, Vantage Quincy, Microsoft Redmond.
Who Sells Into Washington Datacenter Projects
A typical 100 MW datacenter campus in Washington involves dozens of supplier categories. Companies actively pursuing Washington datacenter work include:
- General contractors and construction managers— DPR, Holder, Fortis, Clayco, Whiting-Turner, JE Dunn, Brasfield & Gorrie, Turner, Mortenson
- Electrical contractors and switchgear suppliers — Rosendin, Faith Technologies, Cupertino Electric, Eaton, ABB, Schneider Electric, Vertiv, Powell, Siemens Energy
- Mechanical, HVAC and cooling suppliers — Stulz, Vertiv, Trane, Munters, Carrier, Johnson Controls, Nortek, Stellar
- Power equipment and backup generation — Caterpillar, Cummins, Kohler, Generac, MTU, ABB UPS, Mitsubishi Power, Bloom Energy
- Structural, civil and site work — Concrete, steel erection, sitework grading, paving, fencing and security perimeter
- Fiber, structured cabling and BMS integrators — Corning, CommScope, Panduit, Belden, Honeywell BMS, Schneider EcoStruxure
How to Find Datacenter Projects in Washington
Datacenter projects in Washingtonare best identified through a combination of public and private signals: state and county building permit filings, economic development authority press releases and incentive announcements, utility interconnection queues and substation upgrade petitions, environmental (NPDES, air permit) filings, FAA notices for construction cranes, and hyperscaler real estate filings. SUPPLYCO's AI agents aggregate these signals continuously and surface them to sales reps inside their existing CRM, so contractors and suppliers in Washington can engage before bid lists close.
Explore Other Secondary Markets

Want a real-time feed of datacenter projects in Washington?
SUPPLYCO's AI agents monitor permits, EDA filings, hyperscaler press releases, and substation upgrades to surface datacenter projects in Washington the moment they're announced — so your team can engage before RFPs hit the street.