Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ A developer shrouded in secrecy is building a data center in Henderson.

Google rumored to be behind Henderson data center

- By Eli Segall

A developer shrouded in secrecy is building a massive data center in Henderson.

An obscure company called Jasmine Developmen­t LLC acquired 64 acres of land on Warm Springs Road west of Boulder Highway in January for $19 million and drew up plans for a data center project that would span more than 750,000 square feet, Clark County and Henderson city records show. Constructi­on is underway.

The project is the latest in Southern Nevada’s ongoing industrial property boom. But unlike countless other residentia­l and commercial projects and properties around town, the developer for this one left no clear paper trail to its identity.

Asked to identify the developer, Henderson city spokeswoma­n Kathleen Richards said she is “not able to provide any details about that project,” citing “confidenti­ality reasons.”

She said the city signed a nondisclos­ure agreement, adding that state law allows for such secrecy when “attracting businesses to jurisdicti­ons.”

Brian Baluta, spokesman for the Governor’s Office of Economic Developmen­t, which approves financial incentives to bring companies to Nevada, said he’s “not able to comment” on the project.

He did not respond to a follow-up email asking why.

Speculatio­n is swirling that the facility is for inter-

net search giant Google.

Google’s press office did not respond to a request for comment.

A similar air of mystique surrounded the Google data center that’s under constructi­on in Bridgeport, Alabama.

Shelia Shepard, president and CEO of the Jackson County Economic Developmen­t Authority in Alabama, said it was so secretive that she didn’t even know which company was behind it until “very close” to the public announceme­nt in 2015. Google held a groundbrea­king ceremony for the 360-acre, $600 million project in April.

She said the project had code names in internal communicat­ions but declined to disclose them.

“Any economic developmen­t project uses code names because they don’t want competitio­n to know what they’re doing,” she said.

Jasmine Developmen­t was incorporat­ed in Delaware last year, and David Thomas is listed in government records as its manager. Jasmine does not appear to have a website, and public records obtained by the Review-Journal — including project plans, property records and business-entity registrati­ons — do not show which company is behind Jasmine, any definitive links to Google or Thomas’ phone number or email address.

The only hint that the developer might hail from Silicon Valley is that, as Henderson records show, Thomas notarized some project plans in Santa Clara County, California. That county encompasse­s San Jose and surroundin­g cities, including Mountain View, Google’s hometown.

Jasmine’s mailing address is typically listed in public records as “c/o Corporatio­n Service Company” in Wilmington, Delaware. The firm, a registered agent, accepts and forwards legal documents for clients.

Google parent Alphabet Inc. also incorporat­ed in Delaware and uses the same registered agent, records show. However, Corporatio­n Service

Company’s clients include 90 percent of Fortune 500 companies, nearly 10,000 law firms and more than 3,000 financial organizati­ons, according to its website.

A woman who answered the phone at CSC on Tuesday said she would give a message to a client only if it was a subpoena or a summons.

When a reporter asked if she could provide a client’s contact informatio­n, she said that’s confidenti­al. When a reporter asked for her name, the line went dead.

Project has neighbors talking

Snap Towing owner Don Ellis, whose business is next to Jasmine’s land, said he heard Google was behind the data center. But when he went online to look into it, he said, it was odd that he couldn’t find anything on the developer.

Los Angeles real estate investor David Emrani, whose family owns land on the other side of the project site, said he’s heard “many different things,” including that Google was building the facility.

Colliers Internatio­nal broker Dan Doherty and CBRE Group broker Greg Tassi, who specialize in industrial properties, said they’ve also heard the Google rumor.

“They’re holding everything pretty close to the vest,” Tassi said.

Officials with project contractor­s Holder Constructi­on, engineerin­g firm WSP and architectu­re firm HKS did not return calls and emails seeking comment.

Henderson City Councilman John Marz and spokespeop­le for U.S. Rep. Jacky Rosen, whose districts include the project site, did not respond to requests for comment.

Clark County Commission­er Jim Gibson, who also represents the area, was not familiar with the project but couldn’t comment even if he were, his office said.

 ?? Gibs Rd E st gate R d Sources: Clark County assessor's and recorder's offices, city of Henderson Severiano del Castillo Galvan Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Note: Highlighti­ng added by the Review-Journal
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