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Vantage TX22 San Antonio Data Center Watch
AI & Data Centers

Vantage TX22 San Antonio Data Center Watch

July 18, 2026

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Vantage TX22 is a $272.15M, 214,526 sq ft San Antonio data-center filing with Retained Vantage as owner and Corgan as design firm.

Vantage TX22 gives LVN a clean San Antonio data-center watch item with a public permit trail and a specific address. The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation TABS2026003003 record lists Vantage Data Centers TX22 at 5207 Rogers Road in San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas. The filing describes a new two-story data center for data processing, 214,526 square feet, $272.15 million estimated cost, Retained Vantage Data Centers Development as owner, Corgan as design firm, an October 22, 2025 start date, and a June 15, 2027 completion date.

The record is useful because it is narrow. This is not a generic San Antonio data-center market note. It is a mappable building-level filing with a named owner/developer entity, named design firm, cost, square footage, address, and schedule. Data Center Dynamics separately tied the same TX22 filing to Vantage's 5207 Rogers Road campus and noted that it sits beside the earlier TX21 record at the same address. That makes alias control important: TX22 should be tracked alongside TX21 but not collapsed into it.

For low-voltage contractors, that timing is the point. A registered project with a 2025 start and 2027 completion does not automatically mean the low-voltage packages are visible today. It means civil, shell, power, utility, pathway, security, controls, and commissioning dependencies are moving through the system. The best public signals may appear later as inspection activity, subcontractor hiring, plan-room notices, local permits, utility filings, or contractor website updates. TX22 is early enough to monitor and specific enough to keep the watch list clean.

ItemSource-backed detailLVN read
ProjectVantage Data Centers TX22Building-level data-center filing at the Rogers Road campus.
Location5207 Rogers Road, San Antonio, TX 78251Specific address for permit, inspection, utility, and plan-room monitoring.
ScopeNew two-story data center for data processing; 214,526 sq ftLarge enough for substantial MEP, fiber, security, controls, fire alarm, and commissioning work.
Estimated cost$272.15M TDLR estimateCurrent public-record capex signal for TX22 only.
ScheduleStart Oct. 22, 2025; completion June 15, 2027Active 2025-2027 construction window for package and inspection signals.

Vantage itself is source-backed as a data-center operator and developer through its data-center locations page, even though the reviewed Vantage locations page does not break out TX22 by building name. That distinction matters. The owner/operator family is source-backed, but TX22-specific facts should stay anchored to TDLR and public-record mirrors until Vantage publishes a building-level page.

The local market context also raises the value of a disciplined record. San Antonio has been carrying a cluster of hyperscale and cloud-related data-center filings, including Vantage records, Microsoft records, CloudHQ, CyrusOne, QTS, and Amazon activity in the broader region. That density can make search results noisy. LVN should keep each project separated by address, filing number, owner of record, and building name. For TX22, the clean identifiers are TABS2026003003, Vantage Data Centers TX22, 5207 Rogers Road, Retained Vantage Data Centers Development, and Corgan.

The public project-profile layer supports the same campus read. Datacenters.com profiles Vantage TX22 at 5207 Rogers Road with about 214,525 square feet and Vantage operator context. Data Center Map profiles TX22 as part of the Vantage San Antonio II / Rogers Road context and points to Corgan as design firm. Baxtel's TX21 page is useful mainly as campus context because it distinguishes the nearby TX21/TX22 records at the same Rogers Road site.

Company / sourceRoleEvidence
Retained Vantage Data Centers DevelopmentTDLR ownerTDLR owner record
Vantage Data CentersOwner/operator/developer contextVantage locations page
CorganDesign firmTDLR design-firm record and Corgan data-center capability page
TDLRPublic project recordTABS2026003003
DCD / Datacenters.com / Data Center Map / BaxtelSecondary contextDCD, Datacenters.com, Data Center Map, Baxtel

Corgan is the only design-side firm named directly in the public filing. The Corgan data-center market page source-backs mission-critical design capability, but it does not name TX22 directly. LVN should therefore describe Corgan as the TDLR-listed design firm, not as a confirmed holder of every engineering discipline unless a later source says so.

That design-firm signal still matters. Data-center low-voltage work rarely appears in isolation. It is shaped by pathway planning, equipment-yard layouts, electrical-room coordination, fire/life-safety interfaces, security zones, IT/OT network boundaries, and commissioning documentation. A named design firm gives contractors a reliable search term for future addenda, hiring, conference references, portfolio updates, and package clues, even when the public filing does not expose the subcontractor stack yet.

The contractor stance should remain conservative. Reviewed sources do not name the general contractor, EPCM, electrical contractor, low-voltage contractor, fiber/OSP contractor, structured cabling contractor, security integrator, fire alarm contractor, BAS/BMS/EPMS controls firm, DAS/networking firm, grounding contractor, utility provider, tenant/customer, or commissioning agent for TX22. Vantage / Retained Vantage and Corgan are source-backed. Everything else belongs in the watch lane.

That conservative stance is not just legal caution. It is useful commercially. If LVN prematurely labels a GC or specialty contractor from a nearby San Antonio project, the record becomes less useful for business development. The better move is to publish what the public record proves, list the missing package holders openly, and give contractors the exact terms to monitor. The moment a named electrical, security, fire alarm, controls, fiber, or commissioning firm surfaces, the project can be updated without untangling a bad assumption.

SystemWhy it mattersWatch signal
Fiber / OSPRogers Road campus buildings will need entrance pathways, carrier handoffs, MMR/IDF routes, and tested backbone fiber.Duct bank, vault, handhole, carrier, splicing, OTDR, and entrance-facility language.
Structured cablingData halls, offices, support spaces, and network rooms require disciplined pathways, labeling, and certification.Cable tray, rack/row, fiber/copper certification, labeling, and closeout requirements.
Access control / CCTVData-center campuses need layered perimeter, gate, building, equipment-yard, and secure-area controls.Gate, badging, camera, VMS, analytics, perimeter, and visitor-management package language.
Fire alarmLarge data-processing buildings require life-safety coordination with equipment yards, suppression interfaces, and AHJ acceptance.Fire alarm permits, submittals, acceptance tests, monitoring, and inspection movement.
BMS/BAS / EPMSCooling, power, alarms, monitoring, and facility systems need controls integration and turnover documentation.Controls integrator, point lists, trend logs, EPMS/BMS, alarms, and commissioning records.
Grounding / commissioningMission-critical facilities need bonding discipline, QA/QC, prefunctional checks, and clean turnover packages.Grounding specs, commissioning agent notices, test reports, redlines, and final documentation.

The jobs and skills takeaway is practical, not speculative. TDLR does not list construction headcount or operations jobs for TX22. LVN should not invent those numbers. The useful worker-readiness lane is OSHA/site onboarding, lift access, data-center safety, electrical-room coordination, fiber cleaning and inspection, OTDR and power-meter testing, copper certification, pathway and cable tray discipline, grounding and bonding, access-control commissioning, CCTV/VMS setup, fire alarm acceptance testing, BAS/BMS point verification, redlines, and turnover packages.

For vendors, TX22 is also a reminder that the low-voltage bill of materials is broader than cable. A project like this can create demand for fiber consumables, test gear, labeling systems, pathway materials, racks and cabinets, cameras, readers, locks, door hardware interfaces, public-safety radio support, fire alarm devices, controls hardware, network switches for facilities systems, grounding materials, commissioning documentation tools, lift rental, safety training, and closeout support. The exact vendors are unknown, but the system categories are visible from the facility type.

For recruiters and workforce teams, the practical pitch is similar. The public record does not tell us how many technicians TX22 will need, but it does tell us the site, owner context, design firm, square footage, and timeline. That is enough to prepare a local talent lane around data-center safety, fiber testing, structured cabling certification, access-control commissioning, fire alarm acceptance support, BAS/BMS point verification, documentation discipline, and clean handoff with electrical and commissioning teams.

Alias hygiene matters because San Antonio already has multiple Vantage and non-Vantage data-center records. The DCD article notes TX21 at 5207 Rogers Road and other Vantage filings on Omicron Drive. The Zabalist TDLR mirror also reinforces the TX22/TABS2026003003 identity. LVN should track TX22 under Vantage TX22, Vantage Data Centers TX22, San Antonio TX22, 5207 Rogers Road, Vantage San Antonio II, TABS2026003003, and Rogers Road data center, while keeping it distinct from TX21 at the same address, TX11/TX12 on Omicron Drive, Microsoft SAT82 Castroville, CloudHQ San Antonio, CyrusOne San Antonio, and Vantage Frontier in Shackelford County.

The capacity stance also needs discipline. Current reviewed public sources support the $272.15 million TDLR estimate, 214,526 square feet, two-story data-center scope, owner/developer entity, design firm, address, and dates. They do not disclose MW, critical IT load, utility provider, tenant, generator count, water demand, GC, electrical contractor, or low-voltage package awards for TX22. That missing information is not a weakness in the article. It is exactly why the record should be watched now.

The next public signals to watch are straightforward: TDLR status changes and inspection movement, San Antonio and Bexar County permit references, CPS Energy or other utility-service context, ERCOT or PUCT references if applicable, Vantage updates, Corgan references, plan-room notices, job postings, and subcontractor portfolio pages. Search terms should include Vantage TX22, Vantage Data Centers TX22, San Antonio TX22, Vantage San Antonio II, 5207 Rogers Road, TABS2026003003, Rogers Road data center, Retained Vantage Data Centers Development, and Corgan.

Bottom line: Vantage TX22 belongs in LVN Signal because it is a large, source-backed, mappable, new-construction data-center filing inside an active San Antonio campus. The public facts are strong enough to publish. The specialty package names are still open enough to matter to low-voltage contractors, integrators, vendors, recruiters, and business-development teams watching the Texas data-center buildout.

#ai-data-center·#data-center·#signal-content·#video-source·#vantage·#tx22·#san-antonio·#bexar-county·#texas·#fiber·#outside-plant·#security·#fire-alarm·#bms-controls·#commissioning·#under-construction

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