HyperSolved AI data center water platform deployed at hyperscalers

Gradiant has delivered HyperSolved, an end-to-end cooling-water solution designed for AI data centers, and says it’s now deployed with several of the world’s largest hyperscale operators across major global markets. The pitch is straightforward: treat water infrastructure as a single integrated system—rather than a collection of disconnected vendors and subsystems—so large campuses can scale without water becoming the bottleneck.

HyperSolved covers the cooling-water lifecycle “from sourcing to discharge” as a single platform delivered by one provider. Gradiant says the platform is built for hyperscale environments and is intended to reduce complexity, improve reliability, and speed deployment compared with what it describes as legacy, fragmented approaches.

Water constraints are becoming a harder gating factor in some regions, alongside power availability, land, permitting, and discharge limits. Gradiant argues that while compute and energy systems have matured, water infrastructure often remains disaggregated, which can increase risk and slow deployment. For data center engineers, the practical implication is that cooling-water strategy can’t be treated as a bolt-on utility anymore—especially on large sites where intake, treatment, reuse, and discharge are intertwined with schedule risk and regulatory approvals.

On the sourcing side, Gradiant says HyperSolved expands access to alternative water sources, including municipal reuse and other impaired supplies, with the goal of reducing reliance on freshwater and increasing siting flexibility. For operations, Gradiant says the system protects cooling performance through integrated treatment, plus its CURE Chemicals and SmartOps AI. The company also says HyperSolved is designed to minimize discharge via “high-recovery concentration and reuse,” aiming to improve environmental performance and ease regulatory constraints.

Gradiant says HyperSolved supports rapid deployment through containerized systems that can provide immediate or temporary capacity for fast build timelines, alongside permanent infrastructure intended to optimize long-term performance. The company also says it provides lifecycle support from commissioning through operations.

“Water is one of the least integrated and most fragmented layers of data center infrastructure,” said Prakash Govindan, CEO of Gradiant. “That level of growth demands a new approach.” Sankar Natarajan, Head of Special Projects at Gradiant, added: “You run the data center. We manage the water layer.”

Gradiant says HyperSolved is available globally, supporting hyperscalers, data center developers and operators, and engineering partners across North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.

Gradiant

Source: Gradiant

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