In an industry facing labor shortages, supply chain disruptions, and aggressive timelines, a growing number of developers are finding an unlikely solution: build less on-site.
Modular and prefabricated data center construction is experiencing rapid growth. Components—sometimes entire server halls—are built in factories, trucked to sites, and assembled in weeks instead of months.
For mission-critical construction teams, this shift is changing what skills are in demand and how projects are managed.
The concept spans a spectrum:
Microsoft, Google, and Amazon have all invested heavily in modular approaches. Some hyperscalers now deploy entire facilities using pre-manufactured components.
With 439,000 construction workers needed, prefab shifts work from job sites to factories where:
A factory can produce modular units 24/7 while on-site construction is weather-dependent and labor-constrained.
Traditional build: 18-24 months from groundbreaking to commissioning
Modular approach: 6-12 months for equivalent capacity
For AI workloads where demand is immediate, this timeline difference is decisive.
Factory environments offer:
Materials for modular construction are ordered in bulk, stored in controlled environments, and used efficiently. No weather damage, no theft, no job-site loss.
General contractors are becoming assembly coordinators. Electricians spend less time pulling wire and more time connecting pre-built assemblies. Mechanical teams focus on inter-module piping rather than building systems from scratch.
Sites need:
Modular isn’t a silver bullet:
Industry analysts project modular construction will account for 20-25% of new data center capacity by 2028, up from under 10% today.
For contractors and tradespeople, the message is clear: the future of data center construction involves less building from scratch and more assembling sophisticated components. The crews who adapt fastest will be the most sought-after in the industry.
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