Northern Virginia is the largest data center market in the United States and comprises several counties located 20 to 40 miles west of Washington, D.C. Specifically, Northern Virginia includes Loudoun County (Ashburn, Sterling, Leesburg, Arcola), Prince William County (Manassas, Gainesville, Haymarket), and Fairfax County (Reston, Herndon, Chantilly, Vienna, McLean, Tysons), among others. Those data centers are powered by Dominion Energy, the largest electric utility serving Northern Virginia, and NOVEC (Northern Virginia Electric Cooperative) is another important provider of power. Cloud computing services operating in the area include Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, Meta Platforms (Facebook).
Northern Virginia is followed by Dallas and its neighboring suburbs, including Allen, Carrollton, Fort Worth, Frisco, Garland, Irving, Lewisville, Plano, and Richardson. In total, the area is home to more than 150 data centers and more than 650 megawatts of multi-tenant commissioned power. Among its wholesale data centers are Digital Realty, CyrusOne, QTS Data Centers, STACK Infrastructure. Retail colocation players such as Equinix, DataBank, Flexential and Cyxtera can be found there.
Silicon Valley, the country’s third-largest data center market, has more than 160 data centers with more than 625 megawatts of power supplied primarily by Pacific Gas & Electric and Silicon Valley Power. Operating from those facilities is a veritable who’s who of retail colocation and wholesale data center players, as well as cloud computer giants, including Alibaba Cloud and Oracle Cloud.
The greater Phoenix area with its surrounding communities of Chandler, Mesa, Tempe, Scottsdale and Goodyear, represent the fourth-ranked data center market, with more than 90 facilities and more than 600 megawatt of multi-tenant commissioned power. Digital Realty is a player there, as are Cyxtera, Flexential, CyrusOne, Iron Mountain, Aligned Data Centers and Compass Datacenters.