Why Martin County is Very High risk
Score calculated from four factors: power infrastructure, water capacity, land availability, and current exposure. Martin scores 89/100 — the second-highest in Florida. Maxed-out power, abundant rural land, and the Silver Fox proposal combine into a near-worst-case profile.
Major in-county power generation (≥1,500 MW). FPL infrastructure available for hyperscale siting.
South Florida Water Management District — Everglades restoration, high demand, significant water stress.
Rural with significant open land. Most large parcels still available — exactly why Silver Fox 606 LLC bought 606 acres in Indiantown.
Silver Fox proposal plus the Tesoro Groves PUD framework that explicitly permits data centers on 5,722 additional acres.
The facts, as filed.
Two land-use actions, one overlap.
The entity behind the Silver Fox proposal is Silver Fox 606 LLC, a Juno Beach-based company founded in April 2025. The principal is Nelson Ferreira of Ferreira Construction. The project targets approximately 606 acres of mostly undeveloped land at 13820 Silver Fox Road inside the Village of Indiantown. The project name comes directly from the street. Unlike Palm Beach County's Project Tango — which relies on land first approved for commercial use in 2016 — the Silver Fox parcel was purchased in June 2025 for $17.5 million, well after the current wave of AI data center development began.
As publicly reported, the plan calls for more than 2 million square feet of data center building across four data center structures up to five stories tall, plus a separate AI lab. The developer has claimed approximately 400 jobs once complete — a figure that is itself the subject of debate in comparable proposals, given that operational hyperscale facilities typically employ relatively few on-site technicians and rely heavily on remote operations. Operator identity, cooling system, power source, and water plan have not been publicly disclosed as of April 2026.
Existing zoning in the area permits heavy industrial development, which is a significant procedural difference from projects that require comprehensive-plan amendments. The Silver Fox application is under staff review at the Village of Indiantown. If village officials advance the proposal, Florida land-use procedure requires a series of at least three public hearings before any final action — the same process Project Tango is moving through in Palm Beach County. No public hearing on Silver Fox has been scheduled as of mid-April 2026. Silver Fox 606 LLC has not responded to requests for interview from local news.
On April 16, 2026, the Village of Indiantown's Planning and Zoning Board approved a rezoning tied to a planned-unit development known as the Tesoro Groves PUD. The rezoning covers approximately 5,722 acres of recently annexed land north and south of Southwest Kanner Highway, west of Southwest Warfield Boulevard. Indiantown Community Development Director Deana Freeman emphasized that the action established a framework, not a final development plan — no buildings, tenants, or infrastructure capacity are reserved at this stage.
What makes the Tesoro Groves action relevant to the Silver Fox fight is that data center uses are explicitly listed among the permitted uses under the PUD framework. FPL representative Jaime Gentile told the board that the framework supports a range of light industrial and utility-related uses — electrical infrastructure, technology facilities, research facilities, data processing centers, and associated FPL utility operations such as substations, transmission, distribution, solar, and battery storage. The framework does not itself authorize a data center; any specific project would still require Village Council review and approval.
Residents at the hearing raised concerns about the types of development that would follow. Resident Linda Biscoe argued that power generation and data centers together would amplify impacts on water, noise, and community resources. Kloee Ciuperger, CEO of the Economic Council of Indiantown, argued the flexibility of the PUD would support the village's long-term economic goals. The Tesoro Groves recommendation still requires Village Council action to become final.
How we got here.
For Indiantown and Martin County residents.
Scale relative to Project Tango
Silver Fox is the largest AI/hyperscale data center proposal in the Treasure Coast region to date. It is larger than Project Tango on both dimensions — 606 acres of land vs. Tango's 202, and 2+ million sq ft of building vs. Tango's reduced 1 million. Silver Fox has not publicly disclosed operator, cooling, or power details that would allow a direct environmental comparison.
The zoning shortcut
One reason Silver Fox is procedurally different from Project Tango: the existing zoning in the area already allows heavy industrial development. Project Tango requires a comprehensive plan amendment to expand its 2016 approval; Silver Fox, in theory, might not. Whether that is correct as a matter of Village code is a question residents and attorneys have standing to test. Village of Indiantown staff review is the current stage.
Why the Tesoro Groves PUD matters
Even if Silver Fox were to be withdrawn or rejected, the Tesoro Groves PUD — if the Village Council finalizes the Planning and Zoning Board's recommendation — creates a 5,722-acre framework on adjacent land under which data center projects are already listed as permitted uses. That reduces the procedural hurdle for any future data center developer who might want to file within the PUD area. Resident engagement with the Village Council on the final Tesoro Groves vote is where the broader Indiantown-data-center question is actually decided.
How to participate
Indiantown is an incorporated village with its own council and planning board, separate from Martin County's Board of County Commissioners. Land-use decisions inside the Village — including both Silver Fox and Tesoro Groves — happen at the Village of Indiantown, not Martin County. Residents who want input should track the Indiantown Village Council agenda and Planning and Zoning Board meeting schedule, and speak during public comment at the relevant hearings.
Reporting we relied on.
- CBS12 (WPEC) — original Silver Fox proposal reporting, Village Manager Taryn Kryzda interview
- WQCS — Tesoro Groves PUD hearing coverage (April 16, 2026)
- The Brian Mudd Show (iHeart/Vero Patriot) — Silver Fox 606 LLC corporate background, purchase details, project specifications
- Florida Division of Corporations — Silver Fox 606 LLC entity formation records
- Martin County Property Appraiser — land purchase records for 13820 Silver Fox Road
- Village of Indiantown Planning and Zoning Board — agenda, meeting minutes, application filings
Silver Fox is moving. Tesoro Groves just cleared P&Z.
Nelson Ferreira's 606-acre Silver Fox project at 13820 Silver Fox Road is under review. The 5,722-acre Tesoro Groves PUD cleared Martin P&Z on April 16 with data centers permitted. Martin County's rural character and water stress make you a target, not an exception.
Your Martin Defense Kit is written for your address and your specific concerns — your family's health (diesel backup generators on a 606-acre facility, air quality), your well or aquifer water in a water-stressed district, the 24/7 industrial noise and light, your property value, your FPL bill. It includes a Preparation Brief on Silver Fox, Tesoro Groves, and what those mean for your property, a Martin County public comment letter in your voice ready to submit, a 2-minute hearing script, the Martin commissioners and South Florida Water Management District contacts, and how Florida's 2026 data center laws protect your water and electricity.
$39. Delivered in 60 seconds.
$39 · Delivered in 60 seconds · 180-day permanent link
More on what data centers mean for Florida residents
- Water usage & aquifer impact
- Well water contamination
- Your FPL / Duke / electric bill
- Industrial noise & decibels
- Property value impact
- Health risks & air quality
- Is one near my home?
- HOA & deed restrictions
- Selling a home near a data center
- How to find a proposal
- County commission hearings
- Writing a public comment letter
- How communities stop data centers
- Data centers coming to Florida
- What is a hyperscale data center?