Miami, United States - March 23, 2026 - Core AI Holdings Inc. announced it has entered into a strategic joint venture with Toto Digital & Technology Solutions to develop scalable, AI-ready data center campuses targeting high-growth and underserved markets.
The partnership is designed to capitalize on surging global demand for artificial intelligence infrastructure by deploying high-density, energy-optimized data center capacity as enterprises accelerate adoption of AI-driven applications.
Under the agreement, the joint venture will establish a platform to design, build, and operate purpose-built data center campuses for high-performance computing (HPC) and AI workloads, integrating power and compute infrastructure into a unified model.
Core AI said the initiative addresses a growing supply-demand imbalance in the sector, where existing infrastructure is increasingly unable to support the scale and power density required for modern AI systems. Aitan Zacharin, CEO of Core AI, described the opportunity as part of a broader infrastructure “supercycle,” driven by rapid AI adoption across industries.
Toto DTS will serve as the execution partner, bringing significant global experience in delivering mission-critical infrastructure. The company’s senior partners have collectively delivered 253 data centers and more than 4.5 gigawatts of installed IT capacity across four continents and 12 countries, spanning sectors such as energy, healthcare, financial services, and telecommunications.
The joint venture will focus on developing energy-integrated campuses, aligning power availability with compute demand, an increasingly critical requirement as AI workloads drive higher rack densities and energy consumption. The companies said they will pursue opportunities in key markets where demand for AI infrastructure is outpacing available capacity.
As part of its near-term roadmap, Core AI expects to provide an update in the coming weeks on the first data center campus under the joint venture, marking an initial step in scaling the platform.
The announcement reflects a broader industry shift toward platform-based AI infrastructure development, where partnerships combine capital, technology, and execution capabilities to accelerate deployment. It also underscores the growing importance of integrating energy and data center infrastructure as AI workloads push traditional facilities beyond their limits.
While the companies did not disclose financial terms, ownership structure, or a detailed deployment timeline, the joint venture positions both firms to capture a share of the rapidly expanding global market for AI-driven digital infrastructure.