AI doesn’t float in the cloud. It runs on concrete, steel, and electricity in massive physical infrastructure. It is powered by local electricity grids and located in cities across the country. Residents who live and work nearby have a direct stake in how and where that infrastructure is built.
That makes community consent the deciding factor in the AI race. Technology alone won’t determine the outcome—trust will. Companies that scale fastest will treat sustainable engineering and trust-building as a core business strategy.
The AI race won’t be won in the cloud. It will be won at the fence line.
As an official partner of UNESCO’s World Engineering Day for Sustainable Development 2026, Compass Datacenters is advocating for a new global infrastructure standard that benefits both users and neighbors. This partnership underscores our commitment to earning trust in our home communities, because digital infrastructure succeeds only when it is built responsibly, transparently, and with the confidence of the people it serves.
INFRASTRUCTURE BUILDS PROSPERITY
History shows how powerful physical infrastructure can be. In the 19th century, railroads determined which towns survived. Where tracks were laid, opportunity followed. Families thrived for generations.
Today, digital infrastructure plays a similar role. Data centers are the physical backbone of the AI economy. They deliver foundational assets that will anchor local economies for 100 years.
When built responsibly, data centers create long-term economic opportunity by securing generational careers that allow families to stay and grow in the same community. But that kind of impact requires becoming more than boxes on a map. It requires showing up as continual, integrated members of these communities, not walled off from them.
The global engineering community has an opportunity to define what responsible infrastructure looks like in the age of AI—one that balances innovation with stewardship.
THE “100-YEAR NEIGHBOR” STANDARD
Compass builds differently, committing to every project for the long term to ensure communities benefit alongside technology. And also by paying its fair share for critically needed upgrades, like substations or rights-of-way, so the financial burden is not passed on to local communities.
Approaching our work as a “100-year neighbor” forces a different set of decisions. When you plan to stay 100 years, you don’t cut corners. Just as we expect excellence in residential development, communities deserve high-quality Class A infrastructure. The goal is long-term alignment: a data center that serves the country while supporting the town it calls home.
We minimize disruption to daily life with off-site modular construction and streamlined logistics. We protect local resources by using advanced waterless cooling systems, lower-carbon concrete, and cleaner fuels. We innovate with our partners to build continuous improvement into our plan. And our investments in critical infrastructure stabilize and strengthen the local electric grid.
FROM CONSTRUCTION JOBS TO LASTING CAREERS
Large-scale data center projects create multi-year construction jobs and long-term operational roles that provide stable income with career-building potential. Partnerships with local trade schools build pathways into technical fields and opportunities that anchor talent and families locally.
Over time, these facilities become part of the fabric of the community. A 100-year neighbor provides a permanent tax base that strengthens schools, roads, parks, and public services that families depend on daily.
Built right, its value compounds over time.
NEIGHBORS BECOME PARTNERS
Trust building is the foundation we need for the next century of progress. Companies that earn trust through transparency and by sharing success with home communities will scale while the companies that treat communities transactionally will stall.
When communities feel respected, families thrive, and companies gain the long-term stability required to innovate at scale. The next breakthrough in AI will happen when neighbors become partners.
When national progress is anchored in local prosperity, everyone wins.
Chris Crosby is CEO of Compass Datacenters.
