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Data centers form the high-tech backbone for Iowa

When a data center project breaks ground in Iowa, the impact is felt long before the first servers are powered up and data is processed. It begins with the arrival of hundreds of skilled traders. It continues in busy midday booths at crowded local hotels and neighborhood diners. For Iowa, these projects are more than just buildings. They are the economic engine that will improve our state’s future.

A recent economic impact study by the Technology Association of Iowa confirms what we see every day: data center growth is changing Iowa’s manufacturing industry. A single facility typically employs more than 500 well-paid construction workers from start to finish. According to the Technology Association, current operations support more than 9,000 jobs annually and drive $3 billion in total output. Data processing and hosting is now the second fastest growing industry in Iowa by wages. Iowa families are benefiting from these investments.

Weitz Co. At, we see this benefit in the lives of our people. Our business has grown with this investment, allowing us to create new teams, new positions, and entirely new lines of business. Our engineers, masons, carpenters, and electricians form the backbone of our work, bringing skill and precision to every project as they build state-of-the-art facilities for some of the world’s most influential companies. Guiding these efforts are our builders – many of them homegrown talent from Iowa State University, the University of Iowa, and the University of Northern Iowa – who are world-class experts in high-tech manufacturing.

Data center construction and operations require extreme attention to detail and precision. Data centers have a zero-tolerance policy for variation; Each system must perform exactly as specified. Because of this, the electrical and mechanical designs are among the most sophisticated in the world. We don’t just build warehouses; We are installing advanced thermal management and closed-loop cooling systems designed to minimize environmental impact and maximize efficiency. On a square-foot basis, it’s the most efficient construction going on anywhere today.

The potential of our state is huge. The Technology Association of Iowa found that if Iowa’s full development pipeline is successful, we could see 18,000 data-center-related jobs. This is especially vital for Iowa’s manufacturing community, which provides stable, exceptional wages that anchor our families. The expertise gained by these workers is not lost when the project ends. It becomes a permanent part of Iowa’s “human capital,” raising the ceiling for what our workforce can achieve on future projects.

Importantly, data centers are not “flash-in-the-pan” projects. They are long-term commitments. These campuses often grow structure-by-structure over several years, providing steady, predictable demand for local service businesses. This is what true economic modernization looks like: building a high-value industrial base that will define our prosperity for decades.

Iowa is at an inflection point. Data center investment isn’t a catch-and-forget windfall—it’s a complex economic driver that could make our state the envy of the nation. We have the manpower, infrastructure and community spirit to lead the sector.

Investment is ready. Our builders are ready. The only question is whether we will work together to continue to enable this growing sector of our Iowa economy.

Ryan Lamb

Ryan Lamb Weitz Co. Ma is vice president and general manager, overseeing mission-critical operations with a focus on data center delivery and performance excellence.

This article originally appeared in the Des Moines Register: Data centers are a complex economic driver opinion

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