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Hypertec Cloud’s acquisition of 5C Data Centers creates 5C Group with 2 GW US capacity, aiming to speed AI‑infrastructure rollouts.
Hypertec Cloud has bought colocation provider 5C Data Centers and spun off a new entity, 5C Group, which will deliver AI‑optimized data‑center capacity of up to 2 GW across the United States, a move that could shorten the 18‑24‑month build lag for large AI deployments【1】.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Acquirer | Hypertec Cloud |
| Target | 5C Data Centers |
| New entity | 5C Group |
| US capacity roadmap | 2 GW (600 MW ready in 6‑18 mo)【3】 |
The deal, announced in April 2025, separates Hypertec Cloud from its parent Hypertec Group and merges it with 5C’s data‑center footprint. Jonathan Ahdoot, former president of Hypertec Cloud, will lead the new company as CEO【1】. 5C’s roadmap lists 2 GW of capacity, with 600 MW already slated for deployment within the next six to 18 months, including a 200 MW campus in Columbus, Ohio, and a 20 MW site in Phoenix, Arizona【1】. The acquisition gives Hypertec Cloud direct control over both compute and colocation layers, a claim the company says will “accelerate deployments, push density further, and deliver unmatched efficiency” for large AI users【1】.
AI workloads now demand thousands of GPUs, extensive fiber, and high‑power cooling, yet new data‑center build‑outs typically take 18‑24 months. By bringing together Hypertec’s AI‑cloud services with 5C’s ready‑to‑deploy sites, the combined platform promises faster time‑to‑market for extra‑large AI clusters, a competitive edge over rivals still scaling capacity over a 30‑month horizon【2】. The 2 GW roadmap positions 5C Group as one of North America’s largest AI digital‑infrastructure providers, directly addressing the “most constrained resource” of power‑dense data‑center space cited by partners such as Together AI【2】.
Beyond sheer capacity, 5C Group plans to leverage Hypertec’s legacy in high‑performance computing to embed advanced cooling solutions—direct‑to‑chip liquid and immersion cooling—to boost rack density and cut energy use. The company also intends to maintain “white‑glove” support and engineering innovations honed over four decades, aiming to differentiate on reliability and sustainability as AI workloads grow in complexity【2】.
The creation of 5C Group underscores a broader industry shift toward vertically integrated AI infrastructure, where control of both compute and physical hosting is seen as essential to meet exploding AI demand. Whether the combined entity can deliver on its promise of faster, denser, and more efficient AI deployments will hinge on the speed of its upcoming rollouts and the ability to scale beyond the announced 2 GW capacity.
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