The construction of the $8bn Project Pegasus data center in LaGrange, Georgia is making headway as google confirms its plans. The facility is located some 70 miles southwest of Atlanta as Google confirms its involvement earlier this month. This came to be when the LaGrange Fire Department noted it had rescued a worker from a Google data center construction site at 411 Pegasus Parkway.
Google will front any costs for power at the site and also infrastructure needs. “We are excited to welcome Google to LaGrange and look forward to their partnership with our community,” said LaGrange City Manager Patrick Bowie.
“Google’s decision to locate here fills a vital void in our utility system left by the closing of our largest electric customer. We are working with their team to invest in infrastructure improvements that will benefit all utility customers while exerting downward pressure on rates.” On the other hand, Google’s regional head of data center public affairs, Jen Ryan, added that this “represents another chapter in our deep partnership with Georgia.”
Other Projects
Data centers have been springing up across Georgia such as the $1.2bn DC BLOX data center in Douglasville, Georgia. The firm announced commencement of construction on the campus in Q4 2023. As of early 2026, the project has secured $1.15 billion in financing for development. The first building (Building A) is expected to be delivered in 2026, with subsequent buildings (B and C) expanding the campus to three buildings by 2029.
Outlook on the Project Pegasus Data Center in Georgia
The Project Pegasus data center in Georgia is expected to have a significant impact in expanding Google’s portfolio. Some insights have noted that the campus will facilitate in powering Google searches, maps and YouTube. The site is also located in an industrial zone with 32MW initial power that is expanding significantly. This is fundamental in providing power access for the monumental data center campus.
Despite the significance, there are concerns from residents and conservationists about daily water usage. The facility is anticipated it will use approximately 2 million gallons of water per day, which residents fear will affect them. They are also concerned about the impact the project will have on transmission lines, although it is within a designated industrial.
The project is part of a massive data center boom in Georgia, driven by tax incentives, causing increased scrutiny of resource consumption. However, Google has noted that it will take all its responsibilities. “Google will not pass the costs of its infrastructure growth onto local families,” the company said. The firm already operates one data center in Georgia, in Douglas County.

Project Factsheet:
Name: Project Pegasus
Location: LaGrange
Estimated Investment Value: $8 Billion
Project Type: Hyperscale data center campus
Timeline
2026: Google confirms involvement and project progress
Construction: Ongoing
Operational timeline: Not publicly specified
Site & Scale
Location: ~70 miles southwest of Atlanta
Initial Power Capacity: 32 MW (planned expansion underway)
Campus: Large-scale hyperscale data center development
Water Usage: ~2 million gallons per day (estimated)
Project Teams
Developer/Operator: Google
Local Partner: City of LaGrange
Infrastructure Scope
Data center campus supporting cloud and AI workloads
Power and utility infrastructure funded by Google
Expansion of local grid and utility systems
Industrial-zone development with supporting facilities
Strategic Objectives
Expand Google’s data center footprint in the U.S.
Support services such as Search, Maps, and YouTube
Leverage Georgia’s data center growth and incentives
Strengthen long-term infrastructure partnerships
Challenges
High water consumption concerns from residents
Pressure on local utilities and transmission systems
Community and environmental scrutiny
Current Status
Construction progressing at Pegasus Parkway site
Google has confirmed full infrastructure cost coverage
Project advancing as part of Georgia’s data center expansion boom

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