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  • Cost Seg - DC & Infra
    • Cost Seg - Infra Overview
    • Cost Seg - Data Centers
    • Cost Seg - Nuclear Plant
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Data Center Cost Segregation

Engineering-Appraisal-Based | Power- and Infrastructure-Dominant

Overview


Data centers are infrastructure assets, not conventional real estate.
They are engineered platforms designed around power density, redundancy, resiliency, and continuous operation, where electrical, mechanical, cooling, and network systems dominate total capital investment.


Alpha Consulting US provides Engineering-Appraisal-Based Cost Segregation for data centers—designed to properly abstract non-depreciable land, reconcile total project basis, and classify qualifying tangible assets in a manner consistent with how modern data centers are actually designed, built, and capitalized.


Why Data Centers Require a Different Cost Segregation Framework

Traditional cost segregation approaches evolved around office, retail, and warehouse properties. Data centers operate under a fundamentally different economic and engineering logic.

Modern data centers are characterized by:

  • High power density
  • Redundant electrical and cooling systems
  • No single point of failure design
  • Mission-critical uptime requirements
  • Capital allocation driven by systems, not square footage
     

As a result, depreciation outcomes depend on infrastructure function, not building form.


Infrastructure Cost Concentration Drives Depreciation Outcomes

In contemporary data center development, the majority of capital investment is concentrated in:

  • Electrical distribution and power conditioning
  • Backup generation and redundancy
  • Cooling and environmental management
  • Controls, monitoring, and network infrastructure
     

Office and administrative areas typically represent a minimal portion of total project cost.


An Engineering-Appraisal-Based approach is required to:

  • Evaluate systems based on economic role and function
  • Avoid misclassifying infrastructure as long-life real property
  • Reconcile all allocations to total project basis
     

Why $/MW Matters More Than $/SF

Data centers are increasingly planned, financed, and benchmarked based on cost per megawatt (MW) of critical load, reflecting the reality that power capacity—not floor area—defines capital intensity and risk.

Cost segregation in this environment must:

  • Follow power and systems, not square footage
  • Analyze shell, white space, and infrastructure independently
  • Reconcile allocations using appraisal methodology
     

A building-centric or template-driven study is not sufficient.


Architecture, Resiliency, and Redundancy

No-Single-Point-of-Failure Is a Cost Driver

Data center architecture is intentionally designed with:

  • Redundant power paths
  • Multiple network routes
  • Load balancing and resilient routing fabrics
  • Segregated access, aggregation, and core layers
     

These design decisions materially increase the proportion of system-driven assets relative to traditional buildings.


From a cost segregation standpoint, redundancy is required infrastructure, not excess.


Multi-Tier and Clustered Designs Are Infrastructure

Modern data centers commonly deploy:

  • Multi-tier application architectures
  • High-performance server clusters
  • Dense rack environments
  • High-speed interconnect and storage fabrics
     

The surrounding electrical, mechancal, and network systems exist solely to support computing operations, not human occupancy.


An Engineering-Appraisal-Based framework evaluates these systems by function and economic purpose, not generic building categories.


Land and Campus-Scale Development Considerations

Data center projects increasingly involve:

  • Large land parcels
  • Campus-style, multi-building layouts
  • Phased expansion aligned with power availability
     

While land remains non-depreciable, these trends increase:

  • Site improvement costs
  • Utility and infrastructure investment
  • Complexity in basis allocation
     

Proper land abstraction is therefore a critical risk area and must be handled using appraisal discipline, not percentage shortcuts.


Typical Systems Reviewed in Data Center Cost Segregation

Actual scope depends on design, procurement structure, and documentation, but commonly includes:

Power & Electrical Infrastructure

  • Utility interconnection and distribution architecture
  • UPS and battery systems
  • Switchgear, transformers, busways, PDUs
  • Monitoring, control, and redundancy elements
     

Cooling & Environmental Systems

  • Chillers, CRAH / CRAC systems
  • Liquid cooling infrastructure (where applicable)
  • Environmental controls and monitoring
     

Network & Security Infrastructure

  • Core, aggregation, and access switching environments
  • Redundant routing fabrics and network pathways
  • Firewalls, load balancing, and security systems supporting operations
     

Site & Campus Infrastructure

  • Utility yards, substations, and internal distribution
  • Site improvements supporting phased or campus development
     

Methodology: Engineering-Appraisal-Based and IRS-Defensible

Our data center cost segregation studies are designed to be:

  • Appraisal-disciplined
  • Engineering-informed
  • Internally reconciled
  • Audit-ready
     

Each engagement emphasizes:

  • Proper abstraction of non-depreciable land
  • Reconciliation to total project basis
  • Function-driven asset classification
  • Documentation suitable for IRS review
     

When Data Center Cost Segregation Is Most Valuable

  • Upon placement in service
  • At acquisition
  • After expansion or retrofit
  • For campus or phased developments
  • In connection with valuation, financing, or capital planning events
     

Bottom Line

Data center cost segregation is not a square-foot exercise.
It is an infrastructure, systems, and resiliency architecture exercise.

An Engineering-Appraisal-Based Cost Segregation study aligns depreciation outcomes with how data centers are actually designed, built, and capitalized—independent of market cycle or calendar year.
 

Call to Action

If your data center is power-dense, redundancy-heavy, or campus-based, you may have material depreciation classification opportunity—but only if the study is performed with appraisal discipline and infrastructure literacy.

Copyright © 2018     CostSegregationExpert.com - All Rights Reserved.  Serving Nationwide — Engineering-Based and Appraisal-Based Cost Segregation Studies for Infrastructures (Data Centers, Power & Nuclear Assets) and Commercial, Industrial, Manufacturing, and Multifamily Assets.   Certified General Real Estate Appraiser in States of CA, NV, TX, OR, WA, AZ, HI, GA, VA, DC, MD.


 David Hahn, CVA, ASA, MAFF, CCIM, CM&AA, MBA 

 CVA - Certified Business Valuation Analyst --- (IRS Tax Valuation Expert)

ASA - Accredited Senior Appraiser 

CCIM - Certified Commercial Investment Member

CM&AA - Certified Merger & Acquisition Advisor
MAFF - Master Analyst in Financial Forensics
State Certified General RE Appraiser in California, Arizona, Nevada

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