A mailbox with an address on Troy Avenue is pictured across the street from a farm field with farm buildings in the background.
A home mailbox sit across from farmland southwest of the intersection of Davis Road and Troy Avenue, on May 27, 2025, in Franklin Township on the south side of Indianapolis. The land is the proposed site of a multi-building data center. Credit: Jenna Watson/Mirror Indy

The Metropolitan Development Commission Hearing Examiner will review a proposal on June 12 to rezone farmland on the south side that could be used for a data center.

The rezoning proposal from Deep Meadow Ventures requests to use 468 acres around Post Road and Troy Avenue, near Beech Grove, to construct a data center campus with several buildings. If approved, the land could also be used for other facilities such as light manufacturing or a research center.

Few residents have publicly supported the business venture that could lead to roughly 100 jobs. On the other hand, many community members in Franklin Township are concerned those pros don’t outweigh the cons. They fear years of noisy construction, increased utility bills, potential environmental contamination and a slew of health issues.

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The Protect Franklin Township Facebook group has an online petition with over 2,600 signatures from residents opposing the project as of June 3.

Tech leaders told trade publication Utility Drive that fewer data centers are being built compared to the number of submitted proposals. Cathy Burton, chair of the Franklin Township Civic League’s Land Use Committee, is worried about other projects a developer could build on the land if the rezoning is approved but a data center doesn’t come to fruition.

To top it off, some southsiders are on edge as they believe the outcome of this rezoning request could influence future developments as more local farmland goes on the market.

What’s a data center?

Data centers are facilities that house computer servers to support information technology infrastructure. As the backbone of the digital world, those buildings contain technology that store, process and distribute data.

The U.S. industry boom is mostly led by tech giants like Amazon, Google and Microsoft, which have also used the datahubs to develop artificial intelligence.

The buildings require large amounts of energy. AES Indiana recently announced a request for proposals to build new natural gas generators, which could power these facilities. That could cost billions, and environmental advocates say residents could end up covering much of those costs.

What is Deep Meadow Ventures?

Little is known about Deep Meadow Ventures, a limited liability company that submitted the land use appeal. Company staff members aren’t listed online and executive directors haven’t attended public meetings.

Last month, a lawyer and an engineer for Deep Meadow Ventures announced updates to the proposal during the Franklin Township Civic League’s monthly Land Use Committee meeting. That included more water drainage plans and shorter building heights, based on the community’s concerns. But many neighbors said those adjustments don’t go far enough.

Additionally, Deep Meadow Ventures responded to a list of 80 questions community members previously sent to the developer. The civic league’s land use committee also sent a draft of potential commitments they would like the developer to follow, but the group stressed that the document doesn’t represent the priorities of all neighbors and encouraged residents to continue participating in public meetings.

When is the rezoning meeting?

The meeting for the Metropolitan Development Commission Hearing Examiner is scheduled to consider the project at 1 p.m. June 12 at City-County Building.

A correction was made on June 24, 2025: This article has been updated to correctly note the proposed data center’s location is near Post Road and Troy Avenue.

Mirror Indy, a nonprofit newsroom, is funded through grants and donations from individuals, foundations and organizations.

Mirror Indy reporter Elizabeth Gabriel covers the south side of Marion County. Contact her at elizabeth.gabriel@mirrorindy.org. Follow her on X at @_elizabethgabs.

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