The Wall Street Journal’s article published on February 17, 2026, discusses Virginia’s real estate landscape is being reshaped — not by families or developers, but by Big Tech. Amazon, Google, and other tech giants are buying up land at prices most homebuilders can’t compete with, fueling a growing housing crunch and sparking community pushback.
Northern Virginia, long known as Data Center Alley, has become a magnet for cloud infrastructure. Amazon recently paid $700 million for 189 acres in Prince William County, a site originally planned for homes. Google has acquired 312 acres in Botetourt County, and investors continue to snap up parcels in Spotsylvania, Campbell, and beyond.
Even local businesses are caught up in the rush. Merrifield Garden Center’s Gainesville location, a 38-acre property, sold for $160 million to a data-center developer. The center will close by the end of 2025, leaving only its Falls Church and Fairfax locations open.
Tech companies have three major advantages:
- Deep pockets – They can pay top dollar for strategic land without worrying about short-term sales projections.
- Streamlined approvals – Many counties offer “data center overlay districts,” letting industrial projects move faster than housing subdivisions.
- Strategic necessity – Locations near fiber hubs and substations give tech companies an edge that builders simply can’t match.
For residential developers, these factors create a near-impossible market: competing against multi-million-dollar bids for land originally intended for homes.
The result is clear: fewer lots for new homes, rising prices, and stalled residential projects. Northern Virginia already faces a housing shortage, and local builders, particularly mid-sized firms, are being pushed out.
Residents are taking notice. In Fairfax County, petitions call for linking data-center land sales to affordable housing initiatives. In Leesburg and Campbell County, planning boards have debated proposals, weighing the benefits of economic growth against the loss of residential land.
Data centers bring jobs, tax revenue, and infrastructure investment. Across Virginia, total investment in the sector exceeds $120 billion, funding schools, roads, and public services.
Yet critics warn of hidden costs: fewer homes, higher housing prices, and longer commutes. Some counties are experimenting with solutions. Henrico County, for example, uses tax revenue from data centers to fund housing trust funds, aiming to balance growth with community needs.
Virginia’s experience reflects a broader national trend: digital infrastructure is increasingly competing with traditional land use. Policymakers face a choice — harness tech investment to support communities or risk pricing families out of the neighborhoods they helped build.
With careful planning, Virginia could become a model for balancing innovation with livability. Without intervention, however, Big Tech may continue to dominate the land market — leaving homebuilders and families on the sidelines.


