Tallvine Partners acquires TRG Datacenters to expand data center platform and cooling capacity for enterprise, AI and cloud workloads

Tallvine Partners, an investment advisor focused on middle-market infrastructure, has announced the acquisition of TRG Datacenters, a Houston-based operator serving enterprise, hosting, cloud, and artificial intelligence (AI) clients. According to Tallvine, this partnership will support TRG’s planned expansion of its Houston data center campus and its entry into new metro markets in Texas and across the US.

TRG owns and operates a fault-tolerant data center facility in Houston, which has delivered 100 percent uptime since going live in 2018. The company currently supports over 150 retail and wholesale colocation customers nationwide. Its growth over the last five years has been driven by Colo+, a fully managed colocation service.

To address rising demand from enterprise, hosting, cloud, and AI customers, TRG reports that it is preparing to break ground on an expansion at its Houston campus supporting up to 24 megawatts of additional capacity. This new build will offer both air- and liquid-cooled options and is part of a broader strategy to target new metro markets beyond Houston.

“Our priority has always been delivering reliable infrastructure paired with high-quality customer service,” said Chris Hinkle, CEO of TRG Datacenters. “We are excited to partner with the Tallvine team as they share our long-term vision and commitment to building the right way. With their support, we’ll continue to scale and further strengthen our platform, all while preserving the operational discipline and responsiveness that our customers value.”

“TRG’s success to date, driven by its market-leading Colo+ service offering and its proven ability to support both traditional and AI-driven workloads, makes it a strong foundation for continued platform growth and multi-market expansion,” said Mark Clark, Partner at Tallvine Partners.

TRG plans to remain focused on both retail and wholesale colocation customers and states that it will continue enabling workloads such as AI inferencing as demand for high-performance and managed colocation grows.

Source: Tallvine Partners

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