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Conference ร— Nearby Projects

Data Center Projects Near 7x24 Exchange Spring Conference

When attendees gather for the 7x24 Exchange Spring Conference in Orlando on June 7, 2026, they'll enter a Florida data center market with 26 active project signals tracked by DCWeeklyIntel. The state's development pipeline shows 16 projects in planning stages, representing the dominant share of activity. Two facilities are under construction, one project navigates permitting, and seven remain unclassified by development stage. This planning-heavy pipeline suggests Florida operators are positioning for future capacity expansions while current construction activity remains limited to just two sites.

Florida pipeline signal counts

23
Total
14
Planning
1
Permitting
2
Building
0
Operational

Recent signals in Florida

Nassau County considers moratorium on data centers
NextNRGยท Nassau County, Florida

Miami-based NextNRG has secured a long-term lease option on a 1,600-acre property in Nassau County, Florida for data center development, though the project is facing potential regulatory challenges as the county considers implementing a moratorium on data centers. The massive 1,600-acre site suggests this could be a hyperscale development, representing a significant new data center investment in the Jacksonville metro area. This matters for BD because NextNRG appears to be a new entrant to the data center market with substantial land secured for development, creating potential opportunities for power infrastructure, construction services, and technology partnerships. The timing is urgent given the county's consideration of a moratorium, which could impact project feasibility and timeline.

Fort Meade LLC (Stonebridge) Enters Data Center Market in Fort Meade, Florida
Fort Meade LLC (Stonebridge)ยท Fort Meade, Florida

Fort Meade LLC, a company associated with Stonebridge, is developing Florida's first hyperscale data center in Fort Meade, but the project faces regulatory challenges due to new water usage rules. The development agreement allows the data center to use up to 50,000 gallons of city water, but new regulations may impact the project's viability. This represents a significant development in Florida's data center market, as it would be the state's first hyperscale facility. For BD professionals, this signals a new market opportunity in Florida with a developer that may need infrastructure partners and services. The regulatory uncertainty creates urgency as the project's timeline and requirements may shift based on water permit outcomes.

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