- SPAN plans to install AI-powered GPU boxes outside ordinary suburban homes
- Homeowners offered subsidized electricity for hosting remote computing infrastructure equipment
- Each neighborhood node contains sixteen expensive Nvidia GPUs inside a compact enclosure
A San Francisco start-up called SPAN has proposed locating small data center hubs outside the suburbs.
The company says it aims to deploy thousands of liquid-cooled boxes called XFRA nodes, each containing powerful Nvidia GPUs.
Homeowners would receive subsidized or even free electricity and Internet access in exchange for hosting this equipment on their property.
A silent box with sixteen GPUs
Each XFRA node is attached to the outer wall of a house as an additional utility box.
The device has sixteen Nvidia RTX Pro GPUs and runs with minimal noise, according to company announcements.
SPAN claims it can install eight thousand such nodes for five times less money than building a conventional data center with the same computing power.
“Data centers are loud, unsightly and often drive up local utility bills,” said Chris Lander, vice president of XFRA at SPAN.
“This is quiet, unobtrusive and makes energy more affordable for the host and the community.”
The system utilizes excess electrical capacity already found in most modern American homes.
“Virtually every home with 200-amp utility service has 80 amps available at all times, so we set that as the maximum current draw for a single XFRA node,” Lander explained.
“This home backup is provided to the host at no cost to them, contributing to greater energy resilience in addition to affordability,” he added.
Benefits for utilities and local communities
SPAN claims that distributed nodes help grid operators avoid expensive infrastructure upgrades and that increasing electricity sales over existing grid infrastructure makes power more affordable for everyone.
The approach focuses on AI inference tasks rather than model training, which requires thousands of GPUs to work together.
However, not everyone shares SPAN’s optimism. Ari Peskoe, a director at Harvard Law School, warned that utilities may need to adapt their local grid management to neighborhoods with many such hubs.
“If there’s a block that has multiple homes with these devices, maxing out computing and energy would force a lot of power into the local area,” Peskoe said.
However, there are security concerns with the project as thieves could also target these boxes as each GPU retails for around $10,000.
The company plans a 100-home pilot rollout in 2026, followed by rapid scaling to 80,000 units across the U.S. by 2027.
Whether suburban homeowners will accept this arrangement, which many may not understand, remains uncertain.
Meanwhile, the willingness of utility authorities and local zoning boards to approve such a decentralized data processing experiment remains to be seen.
The pitch sounds appealing on paper, but the real test will come when actual residents discover what it means to live next to a box of expensive electronics that strangers remotely control.
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