SpaceX Unveils 11M Sq Ft Gigasat Factory for Orbital Data Centers

Key Takeaways

- SpaceX is building an 11-million-square-foot factory in Bastrop, Texas to manufacture AI satellites for orbital data centers
- The company targets 1 gigawatt of space-based AI compute capacity by late 2027, requiring over 6,000 satellite launches
- Each AI1 satellite spans 70 meters and carries 150 kilowatts of compute power, cooled by double-sided radiators in space
SpaceX is betting big on space-based computing. The company announced a new 11-million-square-foot manufacturing facility in Bastrop, Texas called the Gigasat factory. Its sole purpose: building the infrastructure for orbital data centers.
In an interview posted on X on June 8, CEO Elon Musk confirmed the facility will start producing complete AI satellites by 2027. SpaceX is targeting 1 gigawatt of orbital AI compute capacity by the end of next year. After that, the company plans to scale by an order of magnitude each year.
Inside the AI1 Satellite Design
Musk unveiled the specifications for the AI1 satellite during the interview. The satellite spans roughly 70 meters (about 230 feet), with a massive solar array making up most of the structure. The array generates power at a density of 250 watts per square meter.
Cooling is handled by vertically oriented, double-sided radiators. The 150-kilowatt peak compute payload sits in the middle of the structure. This design takes advantage of space's natural thermal properties. Radiative cooling in vacuum is far more efficient than anything achievable on Earth.

Vertical Integration on a Single Campus
The 1,000-acre Gigasat site will vertically integrate nearly the entire AI1 supply chain. The facility will manufacture solar ingots and wafers, solar cells, printed circuit boards, silicon-based electronic components, user terminals, gateways, and the satellites themselves.
The campus will also include dedicated satellite development and testing facilities, warehousing and logistics infrastructure, and a large-scale AI satellite production line. According to Musk, solar manufacturing facilities are already under construction. The AI satellite production building is about to break ground.
The Scale Problem: 6,000+ Satellites Per Year
Here is where the math gets interesting. Each AI1 satellite carries 150 kilowatts of compute power. To hit 1 gigawatt per year, SpaceX would need to launch more than 6,000 AI1 satellites in a single year.
For context: Starlink has about 10,500 active satellites as of June 2026. SpaceX would need to nearly match that entire constellation in AI satellites alone, every year, starting in 2027.
Musk's ambitions go further. He hopes to scale to 100 gigawatts per year by 2030. He even mentioned terrawatt-level computing, completely solar-powered in space.
Another look at how hardware constraints shape AI deployment
Why Put Data Centers in Space?
The logic has two parts: power and cooling.
Terrestrial data centers face growing constraints. They consume enormous amounts of electricity. They generate massive amounts of heat that must be dissipated. Both problems are getting worse as AI models grow larger and more power-hungry.

In space, solar power is constant and abundant. There is no night cycle, no weather, no atmosphere absorbing sunlight. Radiative cooling in vacuum is highly efficient. The cold of space itself becomes an asset.
SpaceX is leveraging its deep expertise in mass-producing Starlink satellites and laser inter-satellite links. The company has already proven it can build and launch satellites at unprecedented scale. This is an extension of that capability into a new market.
Technical Questions Remain
The space computing concept faces real challenges. Launch costs matter enormously when you are talking about thousands of satellites. Radiation in orbit degrades electronics over time. Latency for real-time AI inference could be problematic depending on orbital altitude.
Online discussions on HackerNews have focused on the technical feasibility of radiative cooling for high-density compute. Some are skeptical about launch costs at the required mass. Others point to strategic implications of moving Big Tech infrastructure into orbit.
Reddit communities on r/SpaceX and r/ArtificialIntelligence are speculating on satellite design specs and the potential impact on latency for AI inference. The massive land-use scale of the Bastrop facility has also drawn attention.
Logicity's Take
Timeline and Next Steps
SpaceX expects to produce a "reasonable volume" of orbital data centers by the end of 2027. Solar manufacturing facilities are already under construction at the Bastrop site. The AI satellite production building breaks ground soon.
The 2027 target for 1 gigawatt of space AI compute is aggressive. The 2030 target of 100 gigawatts per year is more aggressive still. Whether SpaceX hits those numbers will depend on manufacturing scale, launch cadence, and whether the satellites actually perform as designed in orbit.
More on hardware requirements driving AI compute decisions
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the SpaceX Gigasat factory?
The Gigasat factory is an 11-million-square-foot manufacturing facility in Bastrop, Texas dedicated to building AI satellites for space-based data centers. It will vertically integrate solar cell production, electronics manufacturing, and satellite assembly on a single 1,000-acre campus.
How much compute power will each AI1 satellite have?
Each AI1 satellite will carry 150 kilowatts of peak compute power. The satellites span 70 meters and use massive solar arrays generating power at 250 watts per square meter.
When will SpaceX orbital data centers be operational?
SpaceX expects to produce a reasonable volume of AI satellites by the end of 2027, targeting 1 gigawatt of total orbital AI compute capacity by that time.
Why is SpaceX building data centers in space?
Space offers two advantages for data centers: constant solar power without day-night cycles or weather, and efficient radiative cooling in vacuum. These address the two biggest constraints facing terrestrial data centers as AI workloads grow.
How many AI satellites does SpaceX need to launch?
To hit 1 gigawatt per year with 150-kilowatt satellites, SpaceX would need to launch more than 6,000 AI1 satellites annually. For comparison, the entire Starlink constellation has about 10,500 active satellites as of June 2026.
Need Help Implementing This?
Source: Latest from Tom's Hardware
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
Related Articles
Browse all
Alienware AW2726DM Review: The $350 QD-OLED Gaming Monitor That Changes Everything
Dell's Alienware AW2726DM shatters the OLED gaming monitor price barrier at just $350, delivering 27-inch QHD resolution, 240Hz refresh rate, and Quantum Dot color that rivals monitors costing twice as much. This isn't an incremental price drop. It's a complete reset of what budget-conscious gamers can expect.

iPhone Fold Launch 2026: Apple's First Foldable Could Capture 19% Market Share Instantly
Apple's long-awaited foldable iPhone is finally coming, and analysts predict it'll rocket the company to third place in the foldable market behind Samsung and Huawei. The secret weapon? Some seriously clever material science that could solve the crease problem that's plagued every foldable phone so far.

FAA Approves Military Laser Weapons for Drone Defense: What the New Airspace Rules Mean for Border Security
The FAA has given the Pentagon full approval to use high-energy laser systems against drones in US airspace, ending a two-month standoff that started when lasers shot down party balloons mistaken for cartel drones. The decision comes after safety assessments concluded these weapons don't pose increased risk to civilian aircraft.

China Chip Subsidies Reach $142 Billion: 3.6x More Than US Spent on Semiconductor Manufacturing
A new CSIS report reveals China has poured $142 billion into semiconductor subsidies over the past decade, dwarfing US spending by a factor of 3.6. But here's the twist: despite this massive investment, Chinese chipmakers still lag years behind TSMC and struggle with abysmal yields at advanced nodes.
Also Read

7 Customer Experience Tools for 2026: From AI-First to All-in-One
Customer experience software has become the front line where brands win or lose loyalty. We tested seven platforms across CRM, support, and research categories to help you pick the right tool for your team's CX stack.

5 Workflow Orchestration Tools for 2026: AI Agents Take Over
Workflow orchestration has evolved from simple if-then automation into a field dominated by autonomous AI agents. Zapier, Make, Workato, n8n, and Microsoft Power Automate now compete on governance, self-hosting options, and how well they let businesses deploy intelligent workflows that can plan, execute, and self-correct.

3 Open-Source Operating Systems Beyond Linux Worth Trying
Linux dominates open-source computing, but it's not the only option. A tech journalist shares three alternatives: /e/OS for degoogled mobile, FreeBSD for Unix purists, and a third option for those wanting freedom without the Linux ecosystem.