Market Demand

The Numbers Behind DC + Defense Corridor Demand

Hyperscaler capex, DoD MILCON budgets, CHIPS Act fab workforce requirements, and corridor-by-corridor build-out data. Real numbers that drive real demand.

Hyperscaler Capex Browse Trade Directory →
$413B
US Hyperscaler Capex 2025
MSFT $80B · AWS $110B · Google $75B · Meta $60B
52%
DC operators with workforce disruptions
Industry survey, 2025 — skilled trades are #1 constraint
20–40%
wage premium for DC-experienced trades
vs. standard commercial construction rates
$280B+
DoD facilities + IT modernization FY25–26
MILCON + DISA + cyber + classified infrastructure

Hyperscaler Spending

$413B in Combined Hyperscaler Capex — Where It Goes

AWS, Google Cloud, Azure, and Meta are spending at levels that haven't been seen before. The majority of this flows to physical infrastructure — the trades that build it.

Company FY2025 Capex (Est.) YoY Growth Construction % Est. Primary DC Investment Areas Trade Demand Driver
Amazon (AWS) ~$110B ▲ 31% ~30–40% Virginia, Ohio, Texas, Iowa, Nevada, Oregon Electrical, HVAC, Network Cabling
Microsoft (Azure) ~$80B ▲ 34% ~30–40% Arizona, Texas, Virginia, Illinois, Iowa, Sweden Cooling systems, commissioning, fiber/low-voltage
Google (GCP) ~$78B ▲ 32% ~30–40% Nevada, Texas, Iowa, Oregon, South Carolina, data center corridor expansion Medium-voltage electrical, precision HVAC, OT/ICS
Meta ~$65B ▲ 22% ~35–50% Texas, New Mexico, Iowa, DeSoto (WA), priconvergence AI DC High-density electrical, liquid cooling, structured cabling
Oracle ~$40B ▲ 45% ~30–40% Phoenix, DFW, Ashburn (VA), Utah High-density electrical, precision HVAC
CoreWeave ~$15B ▲ High ~40–50% New Jersey, Texas, Nevada, Ohio Electrical, Cooling, Cabling
Apple ~$22B+ — Flat ~20–30% Arizona, Iowa, North Carolina, EU data centers Electrical, HVAC, fire suppression

Construction % = estimated share of capex flowing to physical infrastructure (buildings, electrical, mechanical, commissioning). Hardware (servers, GPUs) and software/cloud account for the remainder. Sources: Uptime Institute, JLL Data Center Report 2025, company earnings reports. Data as of May 2026.

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What this means for trades:

The majority of hyperscaler capex flows to physical infrastructure — concrete, steel, electrical systems, cooling systems, structured cabling, and commissioning. These companies move faster than government procurement and pay competitive rates. The path in: general contractors (Turner, DPR, Mortenson, Hensel Phelps) who hold preferred vendor relationships with hyperscalers. Getting on their pre-qual lists is the fastest entry point.


Corridor Breakdown

The 9 US Data Center + Defense Corridors

Each corridor has distinct demand patterns, dominant players, and trade specialties. Here's what matters for each.

Hyperscale

Northern Virginia

Largest DC market in the world by MW. Ashburn, Reston, Manassas corridor. AWS, Google, Microsoft, Meta all have major footprints.

Installed MW
4,000+
Vacancy Rate
~2%
Construction Activity
Very High
Trade Wage Premium
25–35%
High-Density Electrical Precision HVAC RCDD CxA
Hyperscale

Phoenix / Mesa

Fastest-growing DC corridor. Low power costs, pro-data-center zoning, seismic stability, dry climate ideal for cooling.

Installed MW
600+
YoY Growth
~40%
Vacancy Rate
~3%
Trade Wage Premium
15–25%
Mechanical Cooling Systems Electrical Commissioning
Hyperscale

Dallas-Fort Worth

Major hyperscaler hub. Google, Oracle, Microsoft all expanding. Cheap land, favorable climate for evaporative cooling, strong fiber.

Installed MW
500+
YoY Growth
~35%
Vacancy Rate
~2%
Trade Wage Premium
20–30%
High-Density Electrical HVAC Fiber Commissioning
Defense

San Antonio / Lackland AFB

Defense corridor hub. DoD tech hub, Cyber Command proximity, JBSA military bases with active MILCON pipeline.

DoD Presence
High
MILCON Activity
Active
Clearance Demand
High
Trade Focus
Electrical + Comms
Electrical SCIF Security Systems OT/ICS
Both

DC/Baltimore Corridor

Defense + data center hybrid. NSA, DoD agencies, defense contractors, plus growing hyperscaler presence (Google, AWS).

Defense Concentration
Very High
DoD Agency Count
30+
DC Growth
Growing
Clearance Needed
Often
Electrical EMI Shielding SCIF Fire Suppression
Hyperscale

Silicon Valley / South Bay

Hyperscaler and AI company concentration. Google, Meta, Oracle, Apple all have significant footprints. NIMBY = supply constrained.

Land Cost
Very High
DC Vacancy
<5%
Trade Wage Premium
30–40%
Growth Rate
Moderate
Electrical Precision Cooling Network/Fiber BMS
Hyperscale

Des Moines / Council Bluffs

Meta's largest DC cluster. Cheap power (corn + nuclear), favorable tax incentives, minimal natural disaster risk.

Key Tenant
Meta dominant
Power Cost
Low
Growth
Steady
Trade Premium
15–20%
Electrical HVAC Mechanical Fiber
Emerging

Pittsburgh / Western PA

Emerging AI compute corridor. Marcellus Shale cheap power, new fiber routes, Pittsburgh tech ecosystem growth. Nvidia AI infrastructure investment.

Power Cost
Very Low
AI Investment
Growing
Fiber Infrastructure
Expanding
Trade Premium
10–20%
Electrical Network/Fiber Water Treatment OT/ICS
Emerging

Columbus, OH / Central Ohio

New hyperscaler destination. Cheap power, fiber expansion, OhioState/tech talent, major new projects from Google and Amazon announced.

New Projects
Active
Power Cost
Low
Trade Gap
Growing
Entry Bar
Low
Electrical HVAC Fire Suppression General Construction

CHIPS Act Impact

Semiconductor Fabs — The New Infrastructure Gold Rush

CHIPS Act subsidies are funding 20+ new fab constructions. Each fab requires a workforce most commercial trades don't have yet.

What's Being Built

The CHIPS Act (Chips and Science Act, 2022) committed $52B to domestic semiconductor manufacturing. This is funding fabs that require highly specialized construction.

Fabs aren't standard buildings — they need:

  • Cleanroom construction — particulate controls, HEPA filtration, positive pressure
  • Ultra-pure water systems — deionized water delivery and treatment
  • Vibration isolation — structural isolation for sensitive equipment
  • EMI shielding — RF and electromagnetic interference control
  • Chemical delivery systems — specialty plumbing for semiconductor processes
  • Liquid cooling — for high-density chip fabrication equipment

Major Active / Planned Fabs

TSMC Fab 1 & 2
Phoenix, AZ (North Phoenix)
Electrical, mechanical, cleanroom, UPW
Active
Intel Fab 52 & 62
Chandler, AZ
Electrical, HVAC, vibration isolation, controls
Active
Samsung Fab
Taylor, TX
Electrical, mechanical, cleanroom systems
Construction
Micron
Clay, NY / Boise, ID
Electrical, mechanical, cleanroom, commissioning
Construction
GlobalFoundries
Malta, NY
Electrical, mechanical, precision systems
Active
SK hynix / TSMC / Others
Various (planned)
Full specialty trades complement
Planned

100,000+ Trades Demand

The CHIPS Act's build-out is projected to require over 100,000 construction trades workers over the 2024–2030 period. The challenge: fab work requires specialization most standard commercial trades don't have. A 100 MW hyperscale campus requires ~850 construction workers over 18 months, with 100–200 permanent operations roles at completion (Uptime Institute 2024).

100K+
Trades workers needed (2024–2030)
850
Workers per 100 MW campus (Uptime Institute)
20+
Major fab constructions funded by CHIPS
2–3 yrs
Avg. fab construction timeline

DoD Facilities Investment

$280B+ in DoD Facilities + IT Modernization FY25–26

Beyond traditional MILCON, DoD is spending heavily on classified data centers, cyber infrastructure, and installation automation — all requiring DC/defense corridor trades.

$280B+
DoD facilities + IT modernization FY25–26
FY2024 MILCON: $18.7B across 300 projects. FY2025 MILCON: $17.5–19.3B (Senate mark). FY2025 NDAA authorization: $923.3B. FY2026 DoD request: ~$961B. Covers MILCON, DISA network modernization, NSA facility expansion, Cyber Command infrastructure, and classified DC build-out. Trades in high demand: electrical, HVAC, fire suppression, SCIF construction, and OT/ICS.
Sources: CRS FY2025 MILCON Appropriations, DoD NDAA FY2025 ($923.3B authorization), WSTRIKE. Data as of May 2026.

Clearance is the key differentiator

DoD facility work often requires Secret or Top Secret clearance. Workers who hold active clearance command a significant wage premium — and many contractors are actively recruiting cleared tradespeople right now.

Secret required TS/SCI preferred SCIF construction EMI shielding

Key DoD Installations Driving Corridor Demand

Fort Meade (NSA)

Classified data center expansion and secure facility modernization. One of the largest DoD IT footprints in the country.

Active
Data center + classified build-out
Secret clearance typically required

Naval Station Norfolk

Largest naval base in the world — active MILCON pipeline for facilities modernization, IT infrastructure, and warehouse automation.

Active
MILCON facilities modernization
Large electrical + HVAC demand

Joint Base Lewis-McChord

Data center and warehouse automation projects as part of Army transformation. Growing IT and facilities investment.

Growing
Automation + facilities IT
Clearance beneficial

Wright-Patterson AFB

AFRL research facilities, IT infrastructure modernization, and defense AI/ML compute infrastructure.

Active
AF IT modernization
Precision electrical + controls

San Antonio (JBSA)

Air Force IT and Cyber Command proximity — major facilities investment, active data center build.

Active
Cyber + IT facilities
Clearance often required

DISA / Defense Network Ops

Defense Information Systems Agency — DoD network modernization, secure comms infrastructure.

Growing
Network + comms infrastructure
Low-voltage + comms trades in demand

Why the Workforce Gap Creates Opportunity

52% of data center operators faced workforce disruptions in 2025 — skilled trades being the primary constraint. That's not a market signal. It's a supply crisis. A 100 MW hyperscale campus requires ~850 construction workers over 18 months, with 100–200 permanent operations roles at completion (Uptime Institute 2024). Hyperscalers will allocate ~$1 trillion for data center spend between 2025–2030 (JLL, 2026). 67% of manufacturers identified workforce shortage as primary business challenge (NAM Q2 2024). 25% of DoD contractor workforce has 20+ years experience and is at or eligible for retirement (Deloitte A&D Outlook 2026).

52%
of DC operators cite workforce as top constraint
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High-Density Electricians

Medium-voltage, large-conduit, busway experience is scarce. apprenticeship-level training pipeline hasn't kept pace with hyperscaler demand.

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Precision HVAC / Cooling

Liquid cooling, CRAH, CRAC, chiller plant experience is in short supply. Most trades coming from commercial HVAC don't have DC exposure.

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Commissioning Agents (CxA)

AABC/BCxA-certified commissioning professionals are booked 6-12 months out. The certification requires 2+ years of commissioning experience — creates a catch-22.

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BICSI RCDD

RCDD certification requires 2-3 years of structured cabling experience post-certification. DC operators list RCDD as a preferred qualification — creates premium for holders.

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OT/ICS Cybersecurity

Building automation, BMS, and industrial control systems specialists with security clearance are in extremely short supply. Defense work locks in premiums.


Corridor Demand Tracker

Demand by Corridor, Trade & Project Type

Static view of active data center and defense build-out by region. Sort by clicking column headers. Data sourced from CBRE Data Centre Trends H2 2025, JLL, Uptime Institute, and USAspending.gov.

Data as of May 2026 · Sources: CBRE, JLL, Uptime Institute, USAspending.gov
Region Primary Trades Demand Level Active MW / Projects Wage Premium Key Projects / Operators
Northern Virginia High-density electrical, RCDD, commissioning, precision HVAC Critical 4,000+ MW · 1,102 MW absorbed in 2025 alone 25–35% AWS, Google, Microsoft, Meta campuses; Equinix, Digital Realty
Dallas-Fort Worth, TX Electrical, HVAC, fiber, commissioning Critical 500+ MW · 470.8 MW absorbed in 2025 · ~35% YoY growth 20–30% Google, Oracle, Microsoft, CyrusOne; on pace to overtake NoVA by 2030
Phoenix / Mesa, AZ Mechanical, cooling systems, electrical, water treatment High 600+ MW · ~40% YoY growth · vacancy ~3% 15–25% TSMC, Intel, Apple, Google; low power cost + seismic stability driving rapid build-out
Des Moines / Council Bluffs, IA Electrical, HVAC, mechanical, fiber High 300+ MW · Meta dominant cluster 15–20% Meta (largest single-operator cluster), Microsoft; cheap nuclear power + corn tax incentives
Columbus / Central Ohio Electrical, HVAC, fire suppression, general construction High Growing · Google + Amazon projects announced 10–20% Google, Amazon, CoreWeave; CBRE top emerging market ranking; low entry barrier for new trades
San Antonio / JBSA, TX Electrical, SCIF, security systems, OT/ICS, comms High Active MILCON · Classified DC projects 15–25% Air Force IT, Cyber Command proximity; DoD MILCON pipeline; clearance required for many roles
Chandler / Phoenix East, AZ (CHIPS) Electrical, mechanical, cleanroom, UPW, vibration isolation High TSMC Fab 1+2 active; Intel Fab 52+62 active 20–30% TSMC, Intel; cleanroom and UPW specialists most in demand; 2–3 year fab construction timelines
DC / Baltimore Corridor Electrical, EMI shielding, SCIF, fire suppression High 30+ DoD agencies · NSA/Fort Meade expansion 20–30% NSA (Fort Meade), DISA, defense contractors; growing hyperscaler presence; Secret/TS clearance often required
Silicon Valley / South Bay Electrical, precision cooling, network/fiber, BMS High <5% vacancy · Very high land cost 30–40% Google, Meta, Oracle, Apple; constrained supply drives premium wages; NIMBY limits new construction
Taylor, TX (CHIPS) Electrical, mechanical, cleanroom systems Moderate Samsung fab under construction · multi-phase 15–20% Samsung; tens of billions invested; specialized cleanroom and UPW trades most in demand
Malta / Clay, NY (CHIPS) Electrical, mechanical, cleanroom, commissioning Moderate GlobalFoundries active; Micron NY under construction 10–20% Micron, GlobalFoundries; Micron NY received $6.1B CHIPS grant; workforce training partnerships active
Pittsburgh / Western PA Electrical, network/fiber, water treatment, OT/ICS Moderate Emerging · Nvidia AI infrastructure investment 10–20% Marcellus Shale cheap power + new fiber routes; Pittsburgh tech ecosystem growth; entry barrier low
Norfolk / Hampton Roads, VA Electrical, HVAC, communications, general facilities Moderate Active MILCON · Largest naval base in world 10–20% Naval Station Norfolk; ongoing MILCON for facilities modernization, IT infrastructure, warehouse automation
Salt Lake City / Reno, NV Electrical, mechanical, general construction Moderate Emerging frontier market · less competition for trades 10–15% Emerging hyperscaler destination; cheap land + fiber expansion; lower competition for trades vs. established corridors
Critical
High-density electrical + RCDD + commissioning in NoVA and DFW — best overall opportunity right now
High
CHIPS fab zones (Phoenix, Ohio, Texas) — specialization premium for cleanroom and UPW trades
Moderate
DoD MILCON corridors (Norfolk, JBSA) — clearance requirement filters competition and drives premiums

Your Path In

What These Numbers Mean for You

The workforce shortage isn't abstract — it's the reason electricians in Northern Virginia earn $15–25/hr more than their commercial counterparts. It's the reason commissioning agents are booked out 6–12 months. It's the reason CoreWeave is hiring tradespeople at premium rates in Ohio right now.

If you're a licensed electrician

High-density, medium-voltage, busway experience opens hyperscaler and defense contractor work. Get on a preferred vendor list.

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If you're an HVAC technician

Precision cooling, liquid cooling, CRAH/CRAC experience is in very short supply. DC operators will pay a premium for this right now.

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If you're a low-voltage tech

Structured cabling, RCDD certification, and fiber experience are in demand across all corridors. SAM.gov has active RFQs right now.

The window is now — here's why

  • Hyperscalers are at peak build cycle — 2025–2027 is when they need the most trades
  • CHIPS Act fabs are mobilizing — 20+ sites under construction, workforce shortage acknowledged
  • DoD is modernizing — $280B+ in facilities + IT, classified DC demand is active
  • The workforce gap won't close overnight — certifications and clearance take time

The trades shortage is structural, not cyclical. It takes 2–5 years to train the specific skills DC and defense facilities require. That means the gap you're seeing today has a multi-year runway.

Browse Trade Directory → Apprenticeship Paths →

The Demand Numbers Won't Wait — Neither Should You

$413B in hyperscaler capex. 100K+ CHIPS Act fab workers needed. 52% of DC operators workforce-constrained. The window is open — browse the trade directory and apprenticeship pipeline to move.