U.S. Data Centers
Data center GPU hosting in the United States
AI GPUs belong in buildings engineered for them. Golden Core Mining hosts customer-owned NVIDIA hardware in professional United States data centers.
Owned hardware hosted on American soil, operated by an American team. Operational benefits are not guaranteed.
Why GPUs belong in a data center
AI GPU hardware is dense, hot, and power hungry. It needs an environment built for those demands. Data centers are engineered precisely for high-density compute, with redundant power, industrial cooling, fast networking, and physical security.
Hosting in a professional facility is what lets hardware run reliably and continuously. It is the baseline for serving AI compute, not a luxury.
The scale of the buildout makes this clear. As AI demand rises, more power and more purpose-built facilities are coming online, because the hardware simply cannot run well anywhere else.
What a professional U.S. data center delivers
Redundant power
Backed-up, high-capacity power for continuous operation.
Industrial cooling
Thermal systems that keep dense GPU hardware in safe ranges.
High-bandwidth networking
Fast, reliable connectivity for large AI workloads.
Physical security
Controlled access, surveillance, and facility-level protection.
Monitoring
Around-the-clock visibility into hardware health.
American operations
Hardware on U.S. soil, operated by a U.S. team.
How much the U.S. data center footprint is growing
176 TWh
U.S. data center electricity use in 2023, up from about 58 TWh in 2014, according to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Source: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, December 2024
~45%
Share of global data centre electricity consumed by the United States in 2024, according to the IEA.
Source: International Energy Agency (IEA), April 2025
Facilities built for the load
A professional campus is engineered end to end for the load AI hardware places on it. Power, cooling, networking, and security are designed together, which is why a real facility outperforms any improvised setup for sustained compute.
Why United States hosting matters
Hosting in the United States means accountability, established infrastructure, and operations you can reason about. Your machine sits in a real American facility rather than an unknown location.
Golden Core Mining deploys and operates customer hardware in these facilities, so owners get the benefits of professional U.S. infrastructure without building it themselves. What the hardware produces still depends on demand and utilization, which are never guaranteed.
How your hardware gets hosted in the U.S.
- Onboard. We confirm your hardware and prepare a place for it in a U.S. facility.
- Deploy. Your NVIDIA machine is installed with redundant power, cooling, and connectivity.
- Operate. We monitor health continuously and coordinate maintenance with a U.S. team.
- Connect. The hardware links to AI provider networks so it can serve demand when it exists.
What hosting does not guarantee
Demand
A facility keeps hardware ready, not busy.
Utilization
Benefits require running workloads.
Uptime
Redundancy reduces, but cannot remove, downtime.
Costs
Power, cooling, and maintenance are ongoing.
Operational benefits are not guaranteed and depend on utilization, uptime, demand, costs, hardware performance, and market conditions.
Data center hosting questions
Data centers provide redundant power, industrial cooling, fast networking, and physical security that AI hardware needs to run reliably and continuously.
Inside professional United States data center facilities, operated by a U.S. team. Your machine sits on American soil.
Yes. Hosting means your machine runs in a professional facility while remaining documented in your name.
According to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S. data center electricity use rose to about 176 TWh in 2023 from roughly 58 TWh in 2014, and the IEA estimates the U.S. consumed about 45 percent of global data centre electricity in 2024.
It means established infrastructure, accountability, and operations you can reason about, with your hardware in a known American facility rather than an unknown location.
No. A facility keeps hardware ready and healthy, but whether it serves workloads depends on AI compute demand and utilization, which are never guaranteed.
Host your hardware where it belongs.
Talk through U.S. data center hosting and operations for NVIDIA hardware you own.
Operational benefits are not guaranteed and depend on utilization, uptime, demand, costs, hardware performance, and market conditions.