Updated
Updated · Civic Media · May 14
Milwaukee Pulls Hearing on 19,000-Square-Foot Midtown Computing Center as Data Center Fears Grow
Updated
Updated · Civic Media · May 14

Milwaukee Pulls Hearing on 19,000-Square-Foot Midtown Computing Center as Data Center Fears Grow

4 articles · Updated · Civic Media · May 14
  • Milwaukee’s City Plan Commission removed a public hearing from its agenda for a proposed 19,000-square-foot research computing center at the old Walmart site in Midtown Shopping Center.
  • Project documents describe the facility as a data processing and computer research use, but city and developer sources say it is far smaller than the large AI data centers that have stirred backlash elsewhere in Wisconsin.
  • The proposal says the center would use conventional air conditioning rather than large evaporative water systems, have typical HVAC-level noise, and rely on generators only during blackouts.
  • Ald. Mark Chambers said the Midtown plan is “nothing even close” to the massive, resource-intensive data centers residents fear, and said he will seek constituent input before any decision.
  • The site still needs City Plan Commission approval because current zoning does not allow the use, while the broader redevelopment also includes a library, affordable housing and self-storage.
How will Milwaukee ensure its new 'research center' won't become a resource-heavy data center?
Can a 'low-impact' computing center truly meet modern data demands without hidden environmental costs?