Image

Meta steals a tactic from Tesla and builds knowledge facilities in tents

Just when you thought the AI data center boom couldn’t get any crazier, Meta has gone and built data centers in tents. The strategy appears to borrow in equal parts from Tesla and xAI.

In a bid to cut the time to completion in half, Meta has built six tents — or “rapid deployment structures” as the company describes them — outside of New Albany, Ohio, according to Michael Thomas, founder of Cleanview, which tracks data center deployments.

Thomas’ discovery isn’t totally new. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg spoke to the Information last year about his plan to use weatherproof tents to house the company’s multi-gigawatt data centers.

But Thomas’ images and review of local permits showcase the speed of construction and scale of the project. According to city permits reviewed by Thomas, Meta started building five 125,000-square-foot tents between April and June 2026. The satellite images he shared in his post on X, show the structures have all been built.

The use of tents is reminiscent to those that Tesla built in the parking lot of its Fremont, California factory when it was rushing to roll out the Model 3. Nearby, 200 megawatts of modular gas turbines provide power to the site, a tactic widely deployed by competitor xAI.

Inside the tents, AI chips, likely worth billions of dollars, will go about their business.

The tents have sprung up as Meta has struggled to release its AI models to developers. A recent report in the Wall Street Journal said that, while its latest model, Muse Spark, is complete, the APIs that developers rely on to access LLMs from their applications has been repeatedly delayed.

Meta has said it intends to spend up to $145 billion on data centers and other capital expenditures. Wall Street hasn’t liked the sounds of that, with Meta’s stock trading down 5% this year. Putting AI chips in tents is one way to trim the bill. 

TechCrunch has reached out to Meta for comment and will update this article if it responds.

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

SHARE THIS POST