Attendees of the 3rd Annual Better Buildings: Data Center Seminar - Dallas on May 14, 2026 will gather amid an active Texas data center market showing 238 tracked projects. The state's pipeline remains heavily weighted toward early-stage development, with 143 projects in planning dominating the activity. Beyond the planning phase, DCWeeklyIntel tracks 17 projects under construction, 14 operational facilities, 1 in permitting, and 63 unclassified signals across Texas. This concentration of planning-stage projects suggests attendees will find numerous opportunities to shape the state's evolving data center landscape.
Data Center Projects Near 3rd Annual Better Buildings: Data Center Seminar - Dallas
Texas pipeline signal counts
Recent signals in Texas
Texas Pacific Land, traditionally an energy-focused landowner operating primarily in West Texas, has announced a material expansion into data center development and supporting infrastructure. This represents a significant diversification for the NYSE-listed company (TPL), which is leveraging its extensive Texas land holdings to enter the data center market. The move positions Texas Pacific Land as a new entrant in data center development, potentially offering land, water rights, and energy infrastructure that are critical resources for data center operators in Texas. For BD professionals, this is an early-stage opportunity to engage with a well-capitalized landowner that controls significant acreage in Texas and is actively seeking data center partnerships or tenants. Outreach should be timely as the company appears to be in the planning and partner-identification phase.
A data center project known as the Zydeco Data Center is facing legal opposition from residents in Hutto, Texas, who have filed a formal legal protest against its development. The developer behind the Zydeco Data Center project is not clearly identified in the available information, but the project appears to be in the planning or permitting stage given the nature of the community opposition. Hutto is located in the greater Austin, Texas metro area, which is a rapidly growing data center market. The legal protest introduces regulatory and timeline risk for this project, which is significant for BD professionals monitoring the Central Texas pipeline. The situation is moderately urgent as community opposition could delay or alter the project scope.
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