Amazon may have a solution to significantly reduce the time required to build data centres, a crucial step for AI development. Reports suggest that the tech giant’s Project Houdini initiative aims to accelerate construction by relocating much of the work from on-site locations to factory-based assembly.According to a Business Insider (BI) report, the initiative focuses on preassembling key parts of data centres, especially server rooms, into large modules that can be built in factories and later transported for installation. The move comes as Amazon Web Services (AWS) seeks to bring new computing capacity online more quickly amid rising demand driven by artificial intelligence.“Given the need for accelerated DC delivery, we have been exploring solutions to take various DC build scopes to a factory setting,” an Amazon document referring to the data centres said, the report noted.
How Amazon’s Project Houdini aims to reshape AI data centre construction
Project Houdini is designed to reduce construction timelines and labour requirements of data centres. According to internal documents cited by Business Insider, the approach could cut months from build times and eliminate tens of thousands of on-site labour hours.Building a data hall currently takes about 15 weeks and up to 80,000 labour hours. Amazon’s Project Houdini shifts construction to factory-built modules, enabling server installation within weeks. The system, expected in August, supports rapid expansion as AWS invests heavily to meet rising demand for AI-driven infrastructure. In his annual shareholder letter, CEO Andy Jassy said the company continues to face “capacity constraints that yield unserved demand.”“Our innovations in data center construction enable us to deliver AI infrastructure faster and at lower cost, which is why customers turn to AWS to run their most demanding workloads,” an AWS spokesperson said in a statement to Business Insider.Project Houdini extends modular data centre design to larger sections, including core server areas, while maintaining control over integration. AWS is working with Cupertino Electric Inc. and plans early production in Topeka, Houston and Salt Lake City, alongside other partners. Experts say the approach reflects growing integration and scale in modular infrastructure. However, power availability remains a key constraint, as grid infrastructure can take years to build. While faster construction helps, overall deployment timelines still depend on energy access.

