Dycom builds a 49-acre fake town for $62K data center jobs
A training simulator turns “unskilled” candidates into ready workers, and it signals how contractors plan around talent shortages.

Dycom Industries is building a 49-acre training facility designed to prepare unskilled workers for approximately $62,000 data center jobs. For decision-makers, it is a concrete play for meeting fast-growing project demand when the labor pipeline is the bottleneck.
Dycom Industries is building a 49-acre “fake town” to train workers for data center jobs that pay about $62,000, targeting people described as unskilled for roles in a sector that keeps expanding. The idea is simple, but the stakes are not: if you cannot staff projects quickly enough, schedules slip, costs rise, and contracts become harder to fulfill. Dycom is trying to compress that labor timeline by creating an on-site training environment that can be scaled and repeated.
The $62,000 figure matters because it helps explain why this strategy is not just about training, but about economic feasibility. Data center work is often discussed like it is purely technical, but the reality on the ground is labor throughput. When companies build “real-world” training into a dedicated campus, they reduce reliance on the slowest part of the supply chain: getting new hires from zero experience to job-ready. Dycom is effectively saying, if the labor market is tight, you build capacity where the skills are developed.
This is also a signal about how contractors think when demand outpaces the traditional hiring funnel. Training programs exist across industries, but a 49-acre facility is a statement of permanence and throughput. Scaling a training town is operationally heavy, which means Dycom is betting that the need for data center construction and related work will stay strong long enough to justify the capital and the manpower required to run the facility.
Zoom out one layer and you get the broader labor context. Data centers require coordinated labor across construction trades, safety protocols, and site readiness. In many markets, the skill pipeline for new entrants is constrained by recruiting timelines, experience requirements, and the fact that training takes time. A training environment that mimics job conditions is a way to take time out of the equation, while also standardizing instruction. That can be especially important when your projects are geographically distributed. You want consistent training outputs, not a patchwork of programs that vary by local labor availability.
There is a capital and governance angle too. When a public company commits to a large training investment like a 49-acre facility, it has to treat it like any other capability upgrade. That means internal alignment around cost, utilization, and measurable improvement in hiring outcomes. For boards and senior leadership teams, the question is whether training capacity reduces risk in three places: schedule risk, cost risk, and quality risk. If workers are trained faster and more consistently, projects can proceed with fewer stoppages. If that happens, the company is better positioned to capture demand rather than get trapped in a “we want to build, but we cannot staff it” loop.
Second-order effects matter. Competitors in construction and contracting tend to watch what large players do when they believe demand will persist. If Dycom makes a training campus a core advantage, it can change competitive dynamics in recruiting. Candidates who might otherwise wait for opportunities could gravitate toward employers offering structured pathways. Meanwhile, suppliers and subcontractors may see steadier demand for services tied to data center builds, which can improve forecasting across the ecosystem.
Finally, for decision-makers reading this, the strategic takeaway is not just that Dycom is building a facility. It is that talent constraints are becoming a first-order factor in how companies win in data center-heavy markets. Boards and executives should treat workforce development infrastructure as a business continuity lever, not a nice-to-have program. When the industry is moving fast, the organizations that can manufacture job-ready talent at scale will spend less time negotiating with reality and more time executing plans.
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