Developer + Accountability
Learn More and Track the Developer
Residents are asking for a clear record of previous projects, timelines, public commitments, and independent sources.
DAMAC: What They Market vs. What Residents Need Answered
On its own About page, DAMAC Digital describes itself as the backbone of the AI economy and emphasizes hyperscale expansion, global delivery, and major-project execution. That is exactly why residents should not accept vague promises. Projects marketed for fast, large-scale growth can shift long-term noise, water, power, and traffic burdens onto nearby neighborhoods unless strict local protections are written and enforced.
Claims on DAMAC's About Page
- - "Hyperscale-ready" infrastructure for AI workloads and enterprise growth.
- - Large global project delivery backed by a major parent company.
- - Local support messaging paired with worldwide expansion goals.
- - Sustainability and efficiency statements without site-specific local guarantees.
Questions Edgerton Should Require in Writing
- - Exact maximum water use by year, including drought contingency limits.
- - Binding noise limits at property lines, overnight and during backup generator testing.
- - Utility upgrade costs and who pays if local ratepayers are impacted.
- - Enforceable penalties if timelines, mitigation, or public commitments are missed.
Founder / Owner Spotlight
Hussain Sajwani (DAMAC Group)
DAMAC Group presents Hussain Sajwani as its founder and chairman. Residents should treat this as a reminder that this project is tied to a large, top-down corporate network focused on major global expansion, not neighborhood-scale quality of life in Edgerton.
Before any approvals, local officials should require enforceable protections on noise, water, traffic, emissions, and utility costs. Personal branding and corporate prestige are not a substitute for binding local safeguards.
Source: DAMAC Group Chairman Page
Source: DAMAC Digital About Us
Texas Observer: When the AI Cloud Comes for Texas Water
Investigative reporting on how rapid data center growth can strain water systems and electric grids, while local communities push for stronger transparency and oversight.
Environmental Health Project: The Dangers of Data Centers
Overview of community-level risks from hyperscale data centers, including noise, light, air pollution, water demand, and utility cost impacts.
Builder / Developer (DAMAC)
Compare developer claims against enforceable conditions, build timelines, and public documentation.
Read DAMAC about page ->