Musk's xAI buys third building to expand AI compute power


xAI logo is seen in this illustration taken, February 16, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

Dec 30 (Reuters) - Elon Musk ‌said on Tuesday his artificial intelligence startup xAI has ‌bought a third building to expand its infrastructure, ‌aiming to boost training capacity to nearly 2 gigawatts of compute power.

The latest expansion underscores xAI's ambitious push to compete more effectively with industry leaders ‍OpenAI's ChatGPT and Anthropic's Claude by training ‍increasingly advanced models. The ‌company's supercomputer cluster in Memphis, Tennessee, known as Colossus, is touted ‍as ​the largest in the world.

"xAI has bought a third building called MACROHARDRR," Musk wrote on X, without ⁠disclosing its location. The term is potentially a ‌play on Microsoft's name.

The Information, which reported the development earlier in the ⁠day citing ‍property records and a person familiar with the project, said the building for a third supersized data center is planned outside Memphis.

xAI ‍is planning to expand its supercomputer ‌Colossus to house at least 1 million graphics processing units.

The startup is planning to start turning the newly purchased warehouse into a data center in 2026, the Information reported, adding that both the new data center and Colossus 2 are close to a natural gas power plant that xAI is building in ‌the area, as well as other power sources.

The expansion of AI infrastructure, however, has drawn criticism from environmental activists as data centers consume ​large amounts of energy.

xAI did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

(Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

How a US startup is using AI to stop human trafficking
Opinion: Despite fears, AI could reduce work week and better people’s quality of life
Social media users says app glitch has them seeing the same videos again and again
Meta is sued by US Virgin Islands over ads for scams, dangers to children
Top 10 video games of 2025: Indie titles dominate a year overshadowed by AI
Two US cyber experts plead guilty to cooperating with notorious ransomware gang
Warner Bros likely to reject Paramount's latest hostile bid, source says
SoftBank completes $41 billion investment in OpenAI, deepening bet on AI
The new billionaires of the AI boom
Nvidia, Lenovo and Samsung to test consumer�appetite for AI at CES

Others Also Read