- Donated park in Texas is becoming multimillion-dollar industrial data center project
- Residents fear constant industrial noise next to homes built near former recreational farmland.
- Texas officials expect millions in future tax revenue from disputed development deal
Nearly three decades after a Texas farmer donated 87 acres of land for community recreation, residents are protesting plans to turn the site into a sprawling commercial data center development.
The disputed land is located in Taylor, Texas, where longtime residents remember generations of children using the open fields to play sports, camp and gather.
According to archived deed records from July 1999, local farmer Mr. Bland transferred the property for just $10 through a public trust agreement.
Residents face massive data center proposal
Pamela Griffin, whose family lived next to the property for decades, recalled Bland telling her father, “I see the kids really have nowhere to play.”
He also remembered it when he added: “I’m thinking about donating this land for a park because these kids need a place to play.”
Public records later showed that the property passed through multiple municipal and nonprofit entities before finally reaching the city of Taylor in 2003.
Five years later, city officials transferred the property to the Taylor Economic Development Corporation for approximately $15,000, substantially changing the property’s management direction thereafter.
The controversy escalated in 2025 after the Taylor Economic Development Corporation sold the same property to developer Blueprint for $10 million.
Blueprint intends to build a 135,000-square-foot data center adjacent to residential neighborhoods, rail infrastructure and an existing electrical substation near Griffin’s home.
Griffin explained that he only learned of the proposed facility after neighborhood organizers reached out to residents as they opposed development plans in 2025.
He said his family initially knew little about modern data centers before researching the facilities and considering the potential consequences for nearby residential communities.
Residents subsequently expressed concerns about electricity demand, industrial noise and environmental stress.
They are also concerned about its potential effects on local water systems surrounding the proposed development area.
Correspondence from city officials reportedly assured residents that several protective measures would reduce potential disruptions associated with the operation of the future nearby facility.
Officials discussed mitigation measures, including landscaped barriers, closed water cooling systems and a dedicated electrical substation.
However, some homeowners fear that proximity to industrial digital infrastructure could reduce the value of surrounding properties.
Legal and financial pressures around development
City officials maintain that existing zoning classifications significantly limit municipal authority regarding permitted commercial uses within the designated employment development district boundaries.
404 Media investigations suggested that municipal restrictions largely involve architectural oversight because current zoning regulations already allow industrial technology facilities within that district.
The developer reportedly still requires planning approvals and building permits before major construction activities can legally begin in the disputed property area.
Meanwhile, city officials continue to defend the deal through the projected financial benefits expected from increased business tax collections over the next decade.
Officials estimate the project could generate approximately $30 million in additional tax revenue, including nearly $20 million in local educational funding.
Despite those projections, critics argue that the dispute increasingly reflects broader tensions between municipal development ambitions and long-standing community expectations around donated public lands.
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