26 March 2026
By Dave Philp, Chief Value Officer, Bentley Systems.
International Data Centre Day is a moment to recognise the often-unseen critical infrastructure that underpins modern life. Like healthcare, transport and energy systems, data centres have become essential civic infrastructure in an increasingly connected world.
These facilities are long‑lived assets, often operating for decades. That means they must be designed and built not just for today’s digital demand, but with full consideration of future generations and their environments and communities.
Today, data centres are no longer isolated technical buildings. They are part of the fabric of local communities. Being a ‘good neighbour’ is no longer optional; it is fundamental to earning trust, securing consent, and operating sustainably over the long term. That requires a clear understanding of how data centres interact with local water resources, energy networks, transport infrastructure, and surrounding land use.
When projects are informed by strong geospatial and subsurface insight from the outset, they can be planned in ways that minimise disruption, reduce risk, and deliver shared value. Done well, data centres can coexist more harmoniously within their environments, demonstrating that critical infrastructure can be a positive and enduring presence rather than a source of tension.
We need to put digital modelling, analysis and visualisation at the heart of how we plan, design, deliver and operate these facilities. By allowing planners, engineers, decision‑makers, and communities to see data centres in context, complex information becomes accessible and transparent. This enables better decisions, earlier engagement, and more resilient outcomes, anticipating construction challenges, responding to environmental constraints, and embedding operational resilience from day one.
As global demand for digital services continues to accelerate, the challenge is not simply to build more data centres, but to build them better. Thoughtful design, digital insight, and a commitment to community and environmental stewardship are what turn a data centre from a functional box into a trusted, long‑term asset that genuinely serves society.



