Blog
Hybrid Data/Detention Centers to Provide Green Power for AI and Cost-Effective Security

When complete and fully populated, most of the power needed to run Planeteer’s massive server banks will be provided by the detention center’s “guests.” They will spin generator-equipped treadmills and exercise bikes for 8-10 hours a day to help defray the cost of their room and board.
“We are thrilled to partner with ICE in this exciting joint venture”, said Al Krap, CEO of Planeteer, whose large fleets of data integration and analytics platforms provide AI-based services to government agencies, financial institutions and commercial enterprises. “Until now, our efforts to locate a data center in Northern New Jersey had been hampered by the limits of the area’s aging power grid.”
He added, “None of the towns we approached were willing to allow us to build a suitably sized onsite generating plant, citing concerns of the noise and air pollution they might generate. Meanwhile, our partners at ICE were running into similar resistance from local governments who were concerned about the additional load that thousands of new residents would put on their waste treatment plants and other local infrastructure.”
According to Krap, he got the inspiration for co-locating the two facilities when he learned about a large discount retail chain that was building housing units above one of its new warehouse outlets in downtown Lose Angeles. The units, which will provide affordable housing for its workers and other locals, are expected to be profitable for the retailer, help reduce employee turnover, and create a social and economic anchor point for the community.
“I was so impressed at how a market-based solution could solve Los Angeles’ housing problems much more effectively than an inefficient government program could ever hope to do, that I decided to leverage the same synergies to overcome the barriers we faced with our plans for expansion” said Krap.
Adding a Second Floor and Dwelling Pods
Conversion of the empty warehouse in Randolph, N.J., to an operational HDDF will involve the addition of a second floor that will house Planeteer’s AI servers and administrative facilities. While the data center is under construction, a second crew will begin to break the existing warehouse’s cavernous open floor into of four secure areas, each containing a “dwelling pod,” capable of housing 375 “guests.”
Each pod will have its own cafeteria and hygiene facility, which the guests can be securely directed to via a series of access-controlled corridors. The residents will also use the corridors to gain entrance to their pod’s “fitness room,” where they have the opportunity earn credit for sundries, phone calls, and their meal rations by generating electricity to power the facility (Fig. 2).











