CoreWeave has signed on as the anchor tenant for the first phase of eStruxture’s new CAL-3 facility, a major boost for Calgary’s growing artificial intelligence infrastructure sector.
Montreal-based eStruxture Data Centers announced today that CoreWeave, the Nasdaq-listed cloud platform built for AI workloads, will take capacity in Phase 1 of CAL-3, the company’s new flagship data centre in Rocky View County.
The 90-megawatt, Tier III-designed facility is scheduled to come online in the second half of 2026 and has been engineered for the high-density power and cooling demands of modern AI computing. eStruxture said the project is part of a more than $1 billion investment in Alberta digital infrastructure.
“Calgary has officially arrived as a top technology destination,” said Todd Coleman, Founder, President and CEO of eStruxture. “Our CAL-3 facility was designed to push the boundaries of power density and cooling efficiency, and CoreWeave’s commitment to anchor Phase 1 is a powerful endorsement of eStruxture’s platform.”
CoreWeave, which describes itself as “The Essential Cloud for AI,” provides cloud infrastructure for AI developers and enterprises. The company went public on Nasdaq under the ticker CRWV in 2025.
Sachin Jain, Chief Operating Officer of CoreWeave, said Alberta’s government and Invest Alberta have been “terrific partners every step of the way,” adding that such support matters when the company makes long-term AI infrastructure investments.
“These facilities serve as anchors for regional economic activity that can compound over time for the communities that host them,” Jain said.
The announcement gives Calgary another major proof point in its push to become a destination for artificial intelligence, cloud, and digital infrastructure investment.
Brad Parry, President and CEO of Calgary Economic Development and CEO of Opportunity Calgary Investment Fund, said the partnership shows the region has the fundamentals global technology companies are looking for, including reliable power, room to scale, strong connectivity, and the ability to build next-generation infrastructure.
For eStruxture, the CoreWeave commitment further strengthens its national platform, which includes data centres in Montreal, Toronto, Calgary, and Vancouver serving nearly 1,000 customers.
“This project not only reinforces Canada’s data economy,” Coleman said, “it cements Alberta as a critical node in the global AI supply chain.”


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