Data centers face new resistance in residential communities

As tech companies race to build AI infrastructure, local zoning boards and residents are using land-use regulations to block or constrain data center development near homes—shifting power away from corporate real estate teams toward community vetoes. This creates friction for the $100+ billion hyperscale buildout: companies can't simply acquire land and build. They must navigate hyper-local politics, environmental impact concerns, and power/cooling conflicts that add years and millions to project timelines. The zoning fight signals that "Connected World" infrastructure is increasingly visible and contested, not a background utility.