Monticello Data Center: Everything We Know About the Proposed 3M+ Sq Ft Tech Campus in Minnesota (2025–2028)

Monticello Data Center: Everything We Know About the Proposed 3M+ Sq Ft Tech Campus in Minnesota (2025–2028)

Last updated: November 29, 2025

Why Monticello? Location, Power, and Land – The Perfect Storm

Monticello isn’t your typical data center hub like the Iron Range up north, but it’s got that Goldilocks factor: close enough to Minneapolis for talent and logistics, cheap enough land for massive builds, and – crucially – powered by Xcel Energy’s Monticello Nuclear Generating Station right in town. That means reliable, low-carbon juice for the always-on servers these beasts need.

Site 1: Monticello Tech Campus (Frattalone Companies) Size: Up to 3 million sq ft on a 550-acre plot. Location: South of 85th Street NW and east of Highway 25, in the city’s Orderly Annexation Area (OAA). This spot’s undergoing an Alternative Urban Areawide Review (AUAR) as of November 2025, with public input sessions wrapping up this week. Why here? Flat land, easy highway access (I-94 is a quick hop), and proximity to Bertram Chain of Lakes for cooling water if needed. Estimated cost: $2.5–$5 billion.

Site 2: Scannell Technology Park Size: 1.3 million sq ft on 106 acres. Location: Between Otter Creek Crossing Industrial Park (north), 90th Street NW (south), and Bertram Chain of Lakes Regional Park (west) – also in the OAA. Environmental review’s in progress. Backed by real estate pros Scannell Properties, this one’s pitched as a flexible “technology park” that could mix data halls with office space.

Both projects align with Monticello’s updated 2040 Comprehensive Plan, which now greenlights data centers in Light Industrial Parks. The city’s already seen annexation petitions roll in (five from Monticello Tech LLC alone in April 2025), and they’re proactively tackling concerns like water use, noise, and traffic.

Fun fact: This mirrors Meta’s $800M, 715K sq ft facility in Rosemount (opening 2026) – MN’s proving it’s a data center magnet, with low energy costs and that Midwestern reliability.


Monticello data center buildout phases

Who’s Behind the Monticello Data Center Projects?

No big-tech anchors announced yet (think hyperscalers like Google or Microsoft scouting anonymously), but the developers are MN-rooted pros:

Frattalone Companies: Family-owned since 1970, they’re the construction muscle for Monticello Tech. Expect them to handle the heavy lifting on permitting and buildout.
Scannell Properties: Chicago-based but with deep MN ties, specializing in industrial parks. Their pitch emphasizes phased development to minimize disruption.

The city hired consultants like Kimley-Horn (for AUAR) and WSB (independent review) to keep things transparent. No formal land-use apps yet, but expect shovels in ground by mid-2026 if all goes smooth.

Timeline: From Proposals to Power-On (Phased Breakdown)

Data centers don’t pop up overnight – these are multi-year beasts with environmental reviews, grid upgrades, and tenant signings. Here’s the realistic roadmap based on city docs and similar MN projects:


Location of Monticello Tech campus south of 85th St

Jobs, Economy, and What It Means for Monticello

The real juice? Economic ripple. These projects could add 500+ permanent roles (ops, security, IT) plus thousands in construction. Post-build, it’s slim (~50–100 direct per site), but the tax base? Game-changer for schools, roads, and that new community center.

For trades: Peak hiring hits Q2 2027. We’re talking electricians wiring 3-phase feeds, HVAC pros for massive cooling towers, and low-volt specialists for fiber runs. (Check our Jobs page for headcount estimates.)

Locals are mixed – Reddit’s buzzing with “not in my backyard” vibes over energy draw and views, but city leaders see it as revenue gold. Xcel’s nuclear plant (1,100 MW capacity) covers the load, no new fossils needed.

Challenges and What’s Next for the Monticello Data Center

Not all smooth: Water sourcing (lakes nearby, but regs tight), noise from generators, and grid strain are hot topics. The AUAR addresses ’em head-on, with buffers and green mandates.

Bottom line: If you’re a contractor, sub, or skilled worker, get on the list now – bids drop early 2026. For updates, subscribe to our newsletter or follow Monticello’s site.

Sources: Monticello MN official docs, Data Center Dynamics, Finance & Commerce (Oct/Nov 2025). This post will update as news breaks.

Ready to Get Involved with the Monticello Data Center Build?

Whether you’re a contractor, subcontractor, staffing agency, or skilled tradesperson looking for work on one of the biggest projects to hit Wright County in decades — now’s the time to get on the radar.

Contractors → Join the early-notification list (takes 30 seconds) Join the Monticello Contractor List →

Looking for jobs or to be notified → See projected headcount by trade and timeline View Monticello Data Center Jobs & Timeline →

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