As Texas houses go on average, that's expensive compared to the average of about $350k. In terms of Austin houses, that's cheap given there are $3M-$10M homes in the Bull Creek area.
I'm putting a single rack mini DC in a backyard shed by adding a high SEER mini-split, massloaded vinyl, and a dedicated outward-swinging door. The trick is not going over 200 sq ft in most of Texas because that requires a permit in most areas.
The thing with Texas though is high property taxes, where the costs for a $2.4M home could be more than $40k/year. SB2 does somewhat protect the elderly and disabled, but no one else, and still, the rates can be very high for them too.
PS: It's a pretty fucking sweet DC that uses EF's SLICTanks quieter mineral oil cooling. They're a niche HPC shop that found new life in BTC mining, apparently.
If they financed $1M @3%, they're printing about 5% a year (negative 5% real interest). That's 1.5M free money in 30 years. So really they're just asking you to buy out their opportunity cost of the feds free wealth redistribution from property non-owners to owners circa COVID.
Texas has a disconnected power grid with a floating price model and a lot of cheap power from renewables. So my understanding is that electrical prices can, at least for parts of the day, dip much lower there than anywhere else in the country.
There are also a lot of Telcos building these sorts of buildings. Actually, having seen a video on this exact house[1], I'm pretty sure I've seen it before, too. "Built in the 90s by at+t" says the video.
lol “shadow operation” what? This house was built before cryptocurrency was even a thing. It’s an old AT&T switching hub that was disguised as a house so as to not make it an eyesore in the middle of a neighborhood.
I'm putting a single rack mini DC in a backyard shed by adding a high SEER mini-split, massloaded vinyl, and a dedicated outward-swinging door. The trick is not going over 200 sq ft in most of Texas because that requires a permit in most areas.
The thing with Texas though is high property taxes, where the costs for a $2.4M home could be more than $40k/year. SB2 does somewhat protect the elderly and disabled, but no one else, and still, the rates can be very high for them too.
PS: It's a pretty fucking sweet DC that uses EF's SLICTanks quieter mineral oil cooling. They're a niche HPC shop that found new life in BTC mining, apparently.