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Guest Columnist Jeff Pierson: Data Center Basics

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December 4, 2025

Data Center Basics
Explained by Ownership, Purpose, Size, and Community Impact

By: Jeff Pierson

Author’s Note: These descriptions are general and are meant to help the public understand the broad differences among the major types of data centers. Technical terms and architectural details are kept to a minimum because the goal is clarity, not engineering depth. Every project has its own requirements, infrastructure demands, and local impacts, but the categories outlined here give a reliable sense of scale. They show why some facilities blend into existing development while others overwhelm small towns with power, water, and land pressures. This guide is not a technical manual. It is a plain-language framework to help communities recognize what kind of project they are actually being asked to accept.

The Different Types of Data Centers

Explained by Ownership, Purpose, Size, and Community Impact

People hear the word “data center” and imagine a giant warehouse full of mysterious computers. The truth is simpler. There are several types of data centers, and each behaves differently depending on who owns it, why it exists, how big it is, and what it does to the community around it.

Enterprise Data Centers

Colocation Centers

Hyperscale Data Centers

Edge Data Centers

Modular or Micro Data Centers

What This Means for Communities

When people say “a data center is coming,” the type matters more than the label. An enterprise or edge facility barely registers in daily life. A colocation center is noticeable but manageable. A hyperscale data center changes everything: land use, roads, water systems, and especially power grids.

Ownership determines who controls it. Purpose determines why it is built. Size determines whether it fits the landscape. And all of that together determines whether the community feels the benefits or pays the price.

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