Boulder City Planning Commission Recommends Denial of 88.5-Acre Data Center Campus

P&D Townsite Solar 2 Denial

The Boulder City Planning Commission recommended denial of Skylar Capital Management’s proposed Townsite Solar 2 data center campus.

The project was proposed on an 88.5-acre site. The Planning Commission was initially slated to consider the proposal during its April 15 meeting but ultimately decided to postpone the hearing to May 20 at the request of the developer’s affiliate, Townsite Solar 2, LLC.

While the project is still in its early phases, the initial proposal is comprised of a 40-foot-tall data center with varying parapets and mechanical screening. The facades will utilize non-reflective earth-tone materials and finishes that align with the desert landscape.

The proposal described the data center as an “institutional-grade, hyperscale/AI-ready data center campus.” Developers intend to use effluent instead of potable water in a closed system.

Project manager Rick Lammers said the data center would need an initial 400,000 gallons of water to fill the system and then it would require an additional 2,000 gallons of water daily to maintain kitchens and bathrooms.

Commissioner Matt Di Teresa was skeptical that the closed system would not require additional water down the line.

When effluent is not being used to cool the system, power will take its place. When not using effluent water, the system will require 20-25% more power. (NVBEX: March 25; April 15)

Nearly all commissioners recommended denying the data center. Commissioner Steven Morris was the only member to recommend its approval, saying the proposal met the “low threshold” to be considered further.

Commission Chair Lorene Krumm said there need to be official rules for data center developments prior to moving projects through.

The controversial development sparked a lengthy public comment period, a protest prior to the meeting and an online petition with more than 5,900 signatures requesting denial of the proposal.

Townsite Solar 2 will still appear before City Council for final consideration.

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Mark Hobaica

Mark Hobaica

Executive Vice President

Core Construction

Since 2019, as CORE Construction’s Executive Vice President for Nevada, Mark ensures every client CORE serves receives the highest level of personalized care for every project. Mark’s passion is client Trust. He cares deeply about CORE’s reputation, partnerships and providing the highest quality and services, as well as most honest and best value possible. He has worked in the Las Vegas Valley and for the Public Works sector for nearly 35 years. He began as an owner in a local architectural firm designing and overseeing projects for Public Works clients for nearly 12 years. He clearly understands the expectations of the public sector, as he then directed numerous projects for over 16 years as the City Architect for the City of Henderson. His focus has always been delivering projects using CMAR or Construction Manager at Risk as he has implemented dozens of projects with his trusted approach, while always involving every stakeholder to ensure each individual receives the highest level of services expected.