CDC Infrastructure operates a network of large-scale data centre campuses that provide critical digital infrastructure across Australia and New Zealand. The company’s footprint spans five regions—Auckland, Canberra, Melbourne, Sydney, and Perth—comprising 12 campuses and 27 data centres, making it the largest owner and operator of data centres in Australia and New Zealand. Its facilities host and support organisations whose systems are essential to national progress, including sectors such as aviation, banking, social welfare, communications, emergency forecasting and other services that underpin economic activity, public services, and scientific research.
CDC Infrastructure designs, deploys, operates, secures, and monitors highly connected and resilient data centre environments. In Aotearoa New Zealand, the Auckland region contains the country’s first hyperscale data centres with more than 220 MW of capacity across multiple campuses. Individual Auckland sites include Silverdale Campus One, with 22 MW of operating capacity and growth planned to exceed 60 MW, Hobsonville Campus One with 22 MW, and Hobsonville Campus Two with 54 MW of operating capacity. The campuses employ 24/7 on-site security with layered physical, personnel, and systems controls backed by government certifications.
The company positions its data centres as energy‑efficient alternatives to dispersed on‑premises computing by aggregating demand into optimised facilities that can reduce overall grid consumption and provide a stable load profile. CDC Infrastructure publishes ESG targets and sustainability goals and reports that its Auckland data centres have been certified net zero carbon since their first year of operation. Across its portfolio, the business emphasises high protective security standards, continuous availability, and long‑term support for the digital infrastructure needs of public and private customers in both countries.