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Project Turbo LLC

About Project Turbo LLC

Project Turbo LLC is a Georgia-based data center development entity tied to a proposed large-scale data center campus in Gainesville, Georgia. The company’s public website is in pre-launch status, and its public filings identify the proposed use at 2400 Okelly Road as a data center on a 119± acre portion of land in Hall County. The development was positioned for large-scale digital infrastructure serving compute, cloud, AI, and enterprise data processing demand in the Atlanta-area data center market.

The proposed campus was designed around a multi-building data center plan. Public reporting described a 900,000-square-foot facility concept, with local reporting identifying three buildings of roughly 300,000 square feet each. The site was planned for significant utility infrastructure, including a new substation, and public meeting coverage cited expected power capacity between 400 MW and 500 MW with a closed-loop cooling design allocated for 225,000 gallons of water per day.

Project Turbo LLC differentiates through its intended scale and location in Hall County, roughly northeast of Atlanta’s core data center market. The project advanced through Hall County special-use and zoning processes in 2025 before the data center special-use plan was withdrawn in December 2025. Project Turbo LLC remains an active Georgia domestic limited liability company formed on June 18, 2025, with a Gainesville principal office address.

🏢 Facility Highlights

  1. Proposed Site: 2400 Okelly Road, Gainesville, Hall County, Georgia
  2. Land Area: 119± acre portion of a Hall County tract
  3. Planned Use: Data center
  4. Planned Scale: 900,000 square feet across multiple buildings
  5. Building Concept: Three buildings of roughly 300,000 square feet each
  6. Power Planning: Expected project capacity between 400 MW and 500 MW
  7. Utility Infrastructure: New substation planned to support the campus

🛠️ Service Portfolio Overview

  1. Data Center Development: Large-scale data center campus planning and entitlement activity
  2. High-Density Compute Infrastructure: Proposed power capacity designed for compute-intensive workloads
  3. Campus Infrastructure: Multi-building data center concept with dedicated utility support
  4. Cooling Design: Closed-loop cooling approach described in public meeting coverage

🏭 Who It Serves

  1. Hyperscale Infrastructure Users: Large-scale compute deployments requiring campus-level power capacity
  2. AI Workloads: High-density infrastructure requirements for accelerated compute
  3. Cloud Platforms: Data center campus capacity for cloud infrastructure deployments
  4. Enterprise Compute: Large-scale digital infrastructure for data processing and hosted systems