Switch announced a sponsored research agreement with Stanford Center for Integrated Facility Engineering (CIFE) to accelerate innovation in digital infrastructure development, with a focus on large-scale capital deployment, industrialized construction, and advanced energy systems. The collaboration targets next-generation AI data centers, where build speed, efficiency, and sustainability have become critical constraints.
The research program will explore methods to improve construction turnover and delivery timelines by combining Switch’s operational processes with CIFE’s Virtual Design and Construction (VDC) modeling capabilities. The initiative also emphasizes industrialized construction techniques, including prefabrication, modularization, and design-for-manufacture approaches, to optimize cost, quality, and deployment speed for Switch’s AI Factory programs. In parallel, the partnership will evaluate new sustainability frameworks, including lifecycle performance modeling and emerging metrics tied to grid-to-token efficiency and grid interoperability.
Switch aims to apply academic research insights directly into its large-scale data center deployments, particularly as hyperscale AI infrastructure drives unprecedented demand for power, cooling, and rapid build cycles. The collaboration reflects a broader trend of tighter integration between infrastructure operators and academic institutions to address system-level challenges spanning construction, energy, and operations.
- Sponsored research focuses on accelerating data center construction timelines and capital efficiency
- Industrialized construction methods include prefabrication, modularization, and DFM techniques
- Energy research targets sustainability metrics, grid interoperability, and lifecycle performance
- Collaboration leverages CIFE’s VDC modeling and Switch’s operational deployment expertise
- Supports scaling of AI Factory infrastructure with improved efficiency and predictability
“Industry-academic collaboration creates unique opportunities to push the boundaries of what is possible in digital infrastructure,” said Skyler Holloway, Vice President of Strategy and Portfolio at Switch.
🌐 Analysis: This partnership aligns with a broader shift toward industrialized data center construction as AI workloads drive hyperscale expansion cycles measured in months rather than years. Operators such as Switch are increasingly adopting manufacturing-style approaches—prefab modules, standardized designs, and digital twins—to compress deployment timelines and manage capital intensity. At the same time, energy system innovation remains a bottleneck, with growing focus on grid integration, alternative energy sourcing, and efficiency metrics tied directly to AI workload economics.







