Meta’s $10B Indiana data hub aims to power next-gen AI systems

Meta is betting that Indiana can anchor the next wave of artificial intelligence by hosting a vast new data hub in Lebanon. The company is committing more than $10 billion to a campus intended to feed power-hungry AI models and support what executives describe as a move toward personal superintelligence for billions of users. The project underscores how quickly AI infrastructure is scaling up, and how aggressively one of the world’s largest tech firms is tying its future to a single Midwestern site.

A $10 billion bet on AI scale

The Lebanon campus is designed as a long-term engine for Meta’s AI ambitions rather than a routine server farm. Company plans call for 13 buildings with a combined footprint of about 4 million square feet, a size that places the site among the largest single corporate developments in Indiana history. Meta has described the project as a Massive $10 Billion Indiana Data Center and a Giant Leap Toward Personal Superintelligence, language that signals how central the facility is to the company’s next generation of AI systems and assistant products that it wants to place in messaging apps, smart glasses, and other consumer devices.

Power capacity tells an even clearer story about the role of the hub. The development plan anticipates a total of 1 gigawatt of data center capacity once the campus is fully built out, a figure that aligns with separate reporting that the project is expected to deliver 1 gigawatt of capacity, which will be able to support Meta’s AI workloads at scale. That level of infrastructure is meant to handle training runs for large language models and recommendation engines that serve billions of users, and it reflects the company’s view that AI is now a core utility rather than a side project.

Why Lebanon and the LEAP district matter

Meta’s decision to place such a large facility in Lebanon reflects both practical needs and a strategic bet on the LEAP district. The LEAP Innovation and Research District has been pitched as a hub for advanced industries such as biotech, pharmaceuticals, and advanced manufacturing, and state officials have framed Meta’s arrival as validation that Indiana can host high-end digital infrastructure alongside those sectors. By choosing Lebanon, Meta is also tapping into a region with available land for a 4 million square foot campus and access to regional power and network routes that can support a 1 gigawatt data center footprint without the congestion seen in more saturated tech corridors.

The project is also part of a broader relationship between Meta and Indiana. Earlier work in the state includes an $800 million data center in Jeffersonville that is nearing completion, which local officials have cited as the company’s first major infrastructure project in Indiana. The Lebanon campus, which represents more than $10 billion in planned investment, becomes the second and far larger phase of that partnership and signals that Meta sees Indiana as a long-term base for its AI buildout rather than a one-off experiment.

Jobs, schools, and community programs

Alongside the technical ambitions, the data hub is being framed as a local economic engine. Construction of 13 buildings and buildout of 1 gigawatt of capacity will require a large multiyear construction workforce, followed by permanent roles in operations, networking, and facilities once the campus is fully online. Meta has also committed to bringing its Community Action Grants program to Boone County, which will provide funding to schools, nonprofits, and local projects so that the company is seen as an active and helpful neighbor in Lebanon and the surrounding area…

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