---
title: "HEAR HERE: NorthMark HPC project in Spartanburg targets Q3 2026 startup"
url: https://www.herespartanburg.com/hear-here-northmark-hpc-spartanburg-q3-2026-4/
date: 2026-04-30T19:15:21-04:00
modified: 2026-04-30T19:15:32-04:00
author: "Reginald Orr"
categories: ["Business"]
site: "HERESpartanburg"
attribution: "HERESpartanburg"
---

# HEAR HERE: NorthMark HPC project in Spartanburg targets Q3 2026 startup

*Source: [HERESpartanburg](https://www.herespartanburg.com/hear-here-northmark-hpc-spartanburg-q3-2026-4/) — April 30, 2026 by Reginald Orr*

A major high-performance computing (HPC) project tied to **NorthMark Strategies** is still on the board for Spartanburg, with state and economic development officials pointing to an initial **third-quarter 2026** timeline for operations to come online.

## What’s been publicly confirmed

State announcements describe the plan as a **$2.8 billion investment** expected to create **at least 27 jobs**. The facility is slated for **4000 South Pine Street** in Spartanburg and is described as a high-performance computing center designed to generate its own power on-site, with the stated goal of minimizing impact on the broader power grid.

## Why a “small job number” can still move the needle

For traditional manufacturing, 27 jobs would read as modest. For HPC infrastructure, headcount is often not the full story. The build-out typically pulls in waves of specialized work — construction, electrical, HVAC, network and fiber, security, ongoing maintenance — and it can create steady vendor demand even if the direct payroll stays relatively lean.

## The local hook: Spartanburg’s industrial + logistics ecosystem

Spartanburg sits in the middle of a high-volume manufacturing and logistics corridor that includes **BMW Manufacturing**, major suppliers, and the Inland Port Greer freight network nearby. If the project moves from “announced” to visible site activity, the near-term business signal won’t just be job postings — it will be contractors on site, subcontractor bids, and local procurement needs for maintenance and operations support.

In plain English: the early intel may show up first in vendor conversations and permitting activity, not in a big hiring splash.

## What we’re watching next

For HEAR HERE purposes, the watchlist is: any clear site-work milestones at South Pine Street, requests for local suppliers and service providers, and whether recruiting begins for technical roles ahead of the Q3 2026 target. If we see recurring vendor categories (security, facilities, electrical, fiber), that’s often the best indicator the timeline is real.
