P Prentice
TeraWulf · NY

TeraWulf Cayuga Site (former coal plant, Lansing)

Getting permits · 320 MW in Lansing, NY. See which trades build a data center this size.

TeraWulf |Opens around 2026
Size
320 MW
Status
Getting permits
Total workers on site at peak
614
Built by
TeraWulf
This data center: built vs. still to build
Running now: 0 MW Still to build: 320 MW Total: 320 MW
Who builds it

Workers on site at peak at TeraWulf Cayuga Site (former coal plant, Lansing)

Electricians173Carpenters106Ironworkers86Pipefitters67Welders48HVAC/R technicians38Network/low-voltage technicians38Plumbers29Sheet metal workers19Elevator mechanics10

How many of each trade will be working on this site at the busiest point.

The short version

What this data center means for the trades

TeraWulf Cayuga Site (former coal plant, Lansing) is TeraWulf's data center in Lansing, NY. It is getting its permits, and it will be about 320 MW when it is done. It is set to open around 2026.

A data center this size takes a small army to build. At the busiest point, about 614 workers will be on site at once. Electricians are needed the most — about 173 of them at peak — to run the power. Pipefitters and HVAC crews handle the cooling, ironworkers and welders put up the steel, and cable techs wire the computers together.

Skilled-trade jobs on data centers are some of the best-paying work you can get without a four-year degree. With overtime, experienced electricians and pipefitters often make over $100,000 a year, and the work comes with health care and a pension through the union.

Lansing is part of a bigger building boom in New York, and workers drive in from all over the area. It is the same across the country: builders cannot find enough skilled workers. The U.S. needs about 140,000 more trade workers by 2030 to build all the data centers, and most builders say hiring is their hardest problem. Microsoft's president has called the shortage of electricians the biggest thing slowing data centers down.

Jobs like this one are why the local trade halls are busy. The work goes through local unions and contractors, and you start through a New York apprenticeship. The trade pages for New York show you how. Sources: a national survey of data-center building plans, plus U.S. jobs and pay data.

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