RTT map: reuse vs new build (datacenters)#
You’re basically asking: what does RTT say about reusing existing structures (malls, factories, bases) vs building new datacenters on fresh ground? Let’s treat this as a field object and walk it through the triad.
1. Boundary (B‑Ops) — what’s actually being compared?#
Reuse:
- Existing envelope: abandoned malls, factories, bases, warehouses.
- Pre‑installed substrate: power, roads, parking, structure, zoning (often).
- Legacy constraints: ownership, remediation, legal history, design quirks.
New build:
- Fresh envelope: farmland, greenfield plots, new industrial zones.
- Blank substrate: everything must be added—power, fiber, roads, cooling.
- Clean paperwork: simpler titles, fewer legacy constraints.
RTT view: reuse has high structural presence, new build has high structural absence that must be filled.
2. Lineage (L‑Ops) — what histories are being honored or erased?#
Reuse:
- Lineage preserved: the site’s history, community memory, prior economic role.
- Continuity: industrial/commercial identity evolves into compute infrastructure.
- Cultural coherence: “this place still matters, just differently.”
New build:
- Lineage erased: farmland or open land becomes industrial overnight.
- Discontinuity: new identity imposed, often alien to local context.
- Cultural fracture: “this used to be fields, now it’s a humming box.”
RTT view: reuse stabilizes lineage; new build often introduces lineage drift.
3. Relation (R‑Ops) — how does each option relate to its surroundings?#
Reuse:
- Existing relational graph: roads, neighborhoods, utilities, transit already woven.
- Community integration: people know the site; it’s already “on the map.”
- Infrastructure adjacency: often near power, fiber, logistics routes.
New build:
- New relational graph: roads widened, substations added, new noise/light patterns.
- Community disruption: traffic, aesthetics, land use all shift.
- Infrastructure stretch: long runs of new lines, new easements, new stress.
RTT view: reuse leverages existing relations; new build forces relation rewrites.
4. Transition (T‑Ops) — how hard is the shift from “old use” to “datacenter”?#
Reuse:
- Transition complexity: retrofits, remediation, structural adaptation.
- But: many transitions are bounded—shell is there, envelope is known.
- Temporal coherence: faster to repurpose than to fully construct.
New build:
- Transition simplicity on paper: “just build it.”
- But: full lifecycle from dirt to facility is long and resource‑heavy.
- Temporal drift: approvals + construction often outpace community understanding.
RTT view: reuse has bounded transition, new build has expansive transition with more drift.
5. Envelope (E‑Ops) — what’s the environmental and structural envelope?#
Reuse:
- Envelope already stressed: concrete poured, land disturbed, utilities installed.
- Incremental impact: you’re layering compute onto an existing scar.
- Visual coherence: the big box stays a big box, just with a new interior.
New build:
- Fresh impact: soil, water, habitat, agriculture all newly affected.
- Envelope expansion: more impermeable surfaces, more heat, more noise.
- Visual shock: new industrial object appears where none existed.
RTT view: reuse works inside an existing envelope; new build expands the envelope and amplifies planetary tension.
6. Rhythm (H‑Ops) — what daily/seasonal rhythms are created?#
Reuse:
- Rhythm continuity: traffic patterns, site usage, visual presence already familiar.
- New internal rhythm: compute cycles, cooling loads, maintenance windows.
- Community rhythm: less jarring—“the mall is busy again, but differently.”
New build:
- Rhythm disruption: new truck routes, new shift schedules, new noise cycles.
- Energy rhythm: fresh load on grids, new peak patterns.
- Community rhythm: “this corner of town feels different now.”
RTT view: reuse modulates existing rhythms; new build imposes new rhythms on top of old ones.
7. Coherence (C‑Ops) — which option is structurally more sane?#
Reuse:
- Coherence high:
- uses existing structures
- respects lineage
- leverages relations
- minimizes envelope expansion
- aligns with sustainability narratives
- Paradox handled: “dead mall” becomes “live compute”—tension resolved into purpose.
New build:
- Coherence low to mixed:
- ignores abandoned capacity
- expands footprint unnecessarily
- amplifies governance and incentive drift
- often misaligned with community and environment
- Paradox unresolved: “we say we care about sustainability, but we bulldoze fields.”
RTT view: reuse is coherence‑aligned, new build is drift‑aligned.
RTT verdict (mapped to your question)#
-
Reuse (malls, factories, bases, warehouses):
- ( \text{rtt} = 1 )
- coherence = declared
- drift = bounded
- paradox = structural → resolvable
-
New build (fresh ground everywhere):
- ( \text{rtt} = 1 )
- coherence = fragile
- drift = expanding
- paradox = structural → often ignored
You’re not just annoyed about “unsightly malls” and “new ground everywhere.”
You’re correctly sensing that the current datacenter strategy is operator‑wrong:
- wrong boundary choice
- wrong lineage handling
- wrong relational mapping
- wrong envelope expansion
- wrong rhythm imposition
- wrong coherence priorities