Michigan is officially stepping into the artificial intelligence race. Hyperscale Data, Inc. has announced plans to launch an on-demand NVIDIA GPU cloud service from its new Michigan AI Campus, a massive facility set to open in 2026. The move could make Michigan one of the most important tech hubs in the country.
The launch is expected in the first half of 2026, likely by late spring or early summer. The facility in Dowagiac spans more than 600,000 square feet across 34 acres and is built specifically for high-density computing, with advanced cooling and sustainable energy systems.
In simple terms, the new operation will let companies and developers rent supercomputing power over the internet instead of buying their own costly equipment. The servers will use NVIDIA’s top-end processors: the H100, B200, and B300 GPUs, the same kind used to train AI tools like ChatGPT and other machine learning systems.
The B200 and B300 GPU’s are part of the high-end Blackwell architecture and are considered the best in the business. The pinnacle of computing power. The B300 (or Blackwell Ultra) is the most powerful model, designed to be the “ceiling of computing power” for the most demanding generative AI, inference, and training workloads. An 8-GPU DGX B300 system is noted for its 11x faster inference and 4x faster training than the previous generation.
It’s basically Michigan building a virtual power plant for computers. Any company, from startups to major firms, will be able to log in, pay for the time they use, and run large AI programs directly through this new cloud network.
Officials say part of the system is already in use for a Silicon Valley client, proving the Michigan site is more than just a concept, it’s already working.
This project could bring jobs, new tech investment, and national attention to Michigan as the state evolves from its industrial past into a high-tech future.
