The new "Muskie Data Campus," acquired from Industrial Equity Partners, is expected to ultimately support more than one gigawatt of data center capacity. For context, a single gigawatt can power roughly 750,000 homes.
The site sits within the 1,000-acre EastPark Industrial Park and encompasses approximately 285 acres of owned and controlled land, with optional adjacent acreage available for future expansion. The company said it is already zoned for its intended use.
The deal reflects a broader scramble among tech and infrastructure firms to lock up land with access to reliable, large-scale power—a resource that has become the central bottleneck in the AI buildout.
"The defining constraint in this market is no longer computing hardware—it is power, transmission infrastructure, and execution certainty," said TeraWulf Chairman and CEO Paul Prager, in a statement.
Kentucky Power is constructing a 345 kilovolt substation tied to an existing 765 kV transmission network to serve the campus. The first 500 megawatts of capacity is expected to come online beginning in the second half of 2028, with an additional 500 megawatts targeted for 2030.
The Muskie campus is TeraWulf's second major digital infrastructure site in Kentucky, joining its 480-megawatt Justified Data campus in Hancock County.



















