Nvidia unveiled plans for a major supercomputing facility in Taiwan. The project partners the chipmaker with electronics manufacturer Foxconn.
The $1.4 billion data center will become Taiwan’s largest GPU cluster. It’s scheduled to come online in the first half of 2026.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
The facility will be powered by Nvidia’s new Blackwell GB300 chips. This makes it Asia’s first GB300 AI data center.
Foxconn created a new business unit called Visionbay.ai for the project. The unit will handle AI supercomputing and cloud operations.
Alexis Bjorlin, a Nvidia vice president, spoke at Foxconn’s tech day event. She outlined the company’s vision for compute resource rental.
The 27-megawatt facility represents Nvidia’s push into service-based AI infrastructure. The GPU-as-a-Service model aims to make AI adoption easier for enterprises.
Visionbay.ai will offer several services through its AI Factory ecosystem. These include GPU leasing, Nvidia-native software solutions and a cloud-based AI App Store.
The business model lowers barriers for companies adopting AI. Enterprises can access training, fine-tuning, development and inference capabilities powered by Nvidia’s architecture.
Bjorlin said building individual facilities may no longer make economic sense. She argued that renting provides better flexibility as GPU technology accelerates.
Foxconn now serves as Nvidia’s main manufacturer of AI racks. These server racks house chips, cables and equipment for AI workloads.
Foxconn Chairman Young Liu told Reuters the company can produce 1,000 AI racks per week. That capacity is expected to grow next year.
Spencer Huang attended Foxconn’s tech day event. Huang manages Nvidia’s robotics product line and is the son of Nvidia founder Jensen Huang.
He said Nvidia is working with Foxconn to bring AI to factories and manufacturing lines. This collaboration extends beyond the supercomputing center project.
The tech day brought together Foxconn’s partners and clients. Attendees included representatives from Nvidia, OpenAI and Uber.
Foxconn gave a positive outlook on AI-related demand for 2026. The company called AI a major growth driver for next year.
Liu said Foxconn plans to invest $2 billion to $3 billion annually in AI. The electronics manufacturer has been expanding beyond its traditional iPhone assembly business.
Foxconn also announced a partnership with OpenAI at the event. The deal involves producing key components for OpenAI’s data centers in the United States.
Neo Yao leads Visionbay.ai as CEO. The company will operate the Taiwan supercomputing center once it comes online.
The facility represents a push toward sovereign AI infrastructure in Taiwan. The GB300 NVL72 systems will support scalable enterprise-grade computing.
Foxconn founder Terry Gou made an appearance at the tech day. The event showcased the deepening partnership between the two technology companies.
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