Sunday, April 19, 2026
Est. 2026 · Independent
Tracking every proposed hyperscale data center in Florida's 67 counties.
Data Center Risk
82/100
Very High

Why St. Lucie County is Very High risk

Score calculated from four factors: power infrastructure, water capacity, land availability, and current exposure. The Sentinel Grove withdrawal hasn't reset the score — the parcel is still owned by the same investor and Atlas Compute is separately in early planning.

Power availability
27/30

Major in-county power generation (≥1,500 MW). Developers can site campuses near existing plants.

Water capacity
6/15

South Florida Water Management District — Everglades restoration, high demand, significant water stress.

Land availability
9/15

Suburban with citrus-grove conversions. Some large parcels available, but growing competition.

Current exposure
40/40

Sentinel Grove was withdrawn but land still held by Epic Estates 68 LLC. Atlas Compute separately in early planning.

This score is comparative, based on publicly available data across Florida's 67 counties. Methodology: how we calculate it.
At a Glance

Two projects, very different scales.

2 projects
Sentinel Grove Site
1,218 acres · Fort Pierce
Sentinel Buildout
Up to 15 million sq ft
Sentinel Investment
$13.5 billion projected
Sentinel Status
Withdrawn Feb 26, 2026
Atlas Compute Site
Midway Industrial Park
Atlas Compute Size
240 MW, scaling to 1 GW
Project Files

The two St. Lucie proposals.

Sentinel Grove Technology Park (Project Jarvis)
Withdrawn · February 26, 2026

The Sentinel Grove Technology Park was designed for approximately 1,218 acres of former citrus groves on the east side of Minute Maid Road, about 2,600 feet north of Orange Avenue (State Road 68), south and east of the South Florida Water Management District's C-25 Canal. The land was purchased for $15 million in July 2024 by Epic Estates 68 LLC, a Tallahassee-based land-banking investment firm. Architect and planning firm HJA Design Studios submitted the application alongside real estate firm Timberline Real Estate Partners.

The scale of what was proposed is difficult to overstate. The applicant's notice described total buildout of 15 million square feet across multiple phases — with 5 million square feet in the first phase alone and an initial capital commitment of approximately $13.5 billion for the first 1,000 megawatts of data center capacity. The buildings would have been around 60 feet tall. The developers projected more than 6,000 high-wage specialized jobs at full buildout, though officials noted the jobs-per-square-foot ratio was lower than typical industrial use.

In late 2025, the St. Lucie County Planning and Zoning Commission voted 4–2 against recommending the comprehensive plan amendment needed to rezone the agricultural land for industrial use. County staff had recommended approval. Residents raised concerns about water consumption (the parcel is already allocated 2.2 million gallons per day), stormwater management, generator emissions, noise, and the transition of productive agricultural land to industrial use.

Commissioner Jamie Fowler called it "the hardest vote to date" and said commissioners planned to visit existing data centers in Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia before making a final decision. That decision never came. On February 26, 2026, the developers voluntarily withdrew the land-use application. St. Lucie County officials said the withdrawal was a response to advancing state legislation — specifically SB 484, SB 1118, HB 1007, and HB 1517, which collectively would create Florida's first statewide framework for regulating hyperscale data centers. The parcel remains zoned agricultural. Epic Estates 68 LLC still owns the land.

Atlas Compute AI Data Center Campus
Early Planning

A much smaller, separately-sponsored project is in early planning within St. Lucie County. Atlas Compute, a Miami-based company, has obtained zoning verification for a proposed site within the Midway Industrial Park in Fort Pierce. The planned facility is designed for an initial capacity of 240 MW with expansion potential up to 1 GW, intended for large-scale AI, cloud, and machine learning workloads.

The design emphasizes closed-loop, water-free cooling — a significant differentiator from projects that rely on evaporative cooling towers. Atlas Compute is partnering with Penguin Solutions for a facility specifically engineered around NVIDIA GPU-based compute. No formal development application had been submitted as of early 2026. Operational target: 2027. Given the early stage and the industrial-park siting, Atlas Compute has not drawn the same community opposition as Sentinel Grove.

Timeline

How Sentinel Grove came and went.

July 2024
Land acquired. Epic Estates 68 LLC buys the 1,218-acre former citrus grove for $15 million.
November 2025
Sentinel Grove proposal surfaces publicly. Port St. Lucie-area outlets report on the 15-million-sq-ft, $13.5B project.
Late 2025
Planning and Zoning Commission votes 4–2 against. The board recommends the Board of County Commissioners not approve the comprehensive plan amendment. Sentinel Grove's path narrows.
December 10, 2025
County Commission delays final vote. Commissioners request additional impact studies. Commissioners Fowler and Townsend announce plans to visit data centers in Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia.
February 2026
Florida Legislature advances SB 484, HB 1007, SB 1118, HB 1517. The bills introduce the first statewide framework for hyperscale data centers — and create real uncertainty for developers whose projects are mid-permitting.
February 26, 2026
Sentinel Grove withdrawn. Developers voluntarily pull the land-use application. County records show the project status as "Canceled." Epic Estates retains the land. The developers say they are monitoring the legislation before deciding whether to refile.
What It Means

For St. Lucie County residents.

The 1,218-acre Sentinel Grove parcel is still owned by Epic Estates 68 LLC. A withdrawal is not a cancellation. If state legislation clarifies what's allowed — particularly around water use, ratepayer cost protection, and local authority — the developers could refile a modified application. Residents concerned about the future of that parcel should monitor public hearings and filings at the St. Lucie County Planning and Zoning Commission.

In the meantime, Atlas Compute's proposal at Midway Industrial Park is proceeding through a much lower-profile path. The industrial-park siting and the water-free cooling design reduce the most common community impacts, which is likely why the project has not drawn organized opposition.

Sentinel Grove's withdrawal — not denial — is a pattern worth watching statewide. Developers may simply wait for favorable legislative clarity before refiling.
Sources

Reporting we relied on.

  • TCPalm — primary local reporting on Sentinel Grove hearings
  • WPTV — St. Lucie County Commission coverage and commissioner statements
  • Data Center Dynamics (DCD) — industry-side reporting on the 4–2 P&Z vote
  • Port St. Lucie Talks — local outlet tracking the February 2026 withdrawal
  • Baxtel / Data Center Map — project details and site geography
  • St. Lucie County Property Appraiser's Office — land ownership and purchase records
What you can do

Sentinel Grove was withdrawn. The land hasn't moved.

Epic Estates 68 LLC pulled the $13.5B proposal in February, but St. Lucie's citrus land, power corridors, and growth pressure are unchanged. The next developer may do exactly what Indian River State College did — rename it, restructure it, and try again under different framing.

Your St. Lucie Defense Kit is written for your address and your specific concerns — your family's health (diesel backup generators, air quality), your well or aquifer water, the 24/7 industrial noise and light, your property value, your FPL bill. It includes a Preparation Brief on your specific property risk, a public comment letter in your voice you can deploy the moment a new proposal is filed, a 2-minute hearing script, the St. Lucie commissioners and state legislators to reach, and how Florida's SB 484 protects you from ratepayer cost-shifting.

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