
OpenAI's Michigan Data Center: 1GW of Power for What, Exactly?
The Stargate project breaks ground in Michigan, and I've got questions about what all that compute actually gets used for.
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OpenAI just broke ground on a 1 gigawatt data center in Michigan as part of their Stargate project. One gigawatt. When I was at Kuka, we thought we were being ambitious when we upgraded our simulation cluster to handle maybe 50 kilowatts of continuous load. Different era, I suppose.
What's Actually Being Built?
The Michigan facility is part of OpenAI's broader Stargate infrastructure push. They're talking about expanding access to AI, creating jobs, supporting local communities. The usual press release language. What caught my attention is the scale: 1GW is roughly what a nuclear power plant produces. That's not a data center, that's a small city's worth of electricity dedicated to training and running AI models.
I called my old colleague Frank at Siemens (he's been tracking industrial power infrastructure for decades now) and his first reaction was basically "where's all that power coming from?" Michigan's grid isn't exactly overbuilt. The details on that front remain unclear, at least from what OpenAI's published so far.
Why Should Robotics People Care?
Look, here's the thing. OpenAI's also reportedly building AI tools for finance and legal professionals, expanding beyond their coding agent work. Bloomberg reports they're racing Anthropic to sign up business customers across multiple sectors.
But nobody's talking about robotics integration, and that strikes me as odd. All this compute, all this infrastructure, and the applications being discussed are document processing and code generation. When I think about what a gigawatt of AI compute could do for motion planning, for real-time adaptation in warehouse environments, for the kind of simulation work that took us months at Kuka... it's frustrating, in a way.
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