Data center developer Edged has filed plans with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation to build a new facility in Fort Worth, Texas, marking another expansion in the state as the company continues to grow its North American and European footprint.

Project Details and Timeline

The filing identifies the project site as 9999 Chapin School Road in Fort Worth, Tarrant County. Listed under the name Edged Energy Outpost, the facility is described as a 488,770 square foot, or approximately 45,410 square meter, data center.

The project carries a price tag of USD 300 million, with development scheduled to run from July 2026 through December 2027.

News that Edged had been eyeing a Fort Worth project surfaced previously, after the company acquired 186 acres from PMB Investment.

The company has also filed with the local planning commission, though a few additional details about the development had emerged prior to the regulatory filing.

Edged's Existing Texas Presence

Fort Worth represents the latest addition to what has become a substantial Texas portfolio for the company. Edged currently operates a data center outside Dallas in Irving, located at 505 N Wildwood Drive.

That facility, designated DFW01-1, occupies an 11-acre site and offers 24 megawatts of capacity across 168,610 square feet.

Plans for the original Dallas data center were first revealed in September 2023, and the facility launched in January 2025.

The Irving site is also set to grow.

Edged secured permission in January 2026 to add a second 24-megawatt data center building on the same property.

The company is additionally developing a site in Austin, making Fort Worth the third distinct Texas location in its active development pipeline.

Company Background and Broader Portfolio

Edged, formerly known as Edged Energy, operates as part of Endeavor, a company set up by Jakob Carnemark, the founder of data center firm Aligned.

Beyond Texas, Edged has data centers either operating or in development across a wide range of locations. In the United States, those include Missouri, Arizona, Georgia, Iowa, Ohio, and Illinois.

Internationally, the company has facilities in Bilbao, Madrid, and Barcelona in Spain, as well as Lisbon, Portugal.

The Fort Worth filing comes as data center investment in the Dallas-Fort Worth region continues to draw significant capital from developers seeking to establish or expand capacity in one of the country's fastest-growing technology infrastructure markets.