The most technologically advanced
neighborhood ever built.
Every other community on earth was designed before AI. This one was designed around it — a hyperscale-class data center beneath the foundation, with the byproducts powering everything residents touch.
Not just a place to live. A high-performance ecosystem.
For over a century, electricity, water, and gas have been the utilities that define a neighborhood. The Neighborhood Smart Vault adds a fourth: sovereign compute power — private, low-latency AI infrastructure owned and operated for the benefit of the community that hosts it.
Just as municipal water treatment transformed quality of life, embedded edge computing transforms how residents work, learn, stay secure, and manage their homes — without sending their data to distant hyperscale clouds.
Private GPU compute embedded in your neighborhood — your data never leaves your community's infrastructure.
100% of waste heat from compute is captured and cascaded through community amenities — hot tubs, pools, A/C, and more.
Integrated battery storage serves as a life-safety hub, keeping critical systems online when the grid goes down.
Sub-5ms local AI response times enable real-time smart home automation, security, and personalized services.
One Vault. An Entire Community.
A single underground Smart Vault serves every home, the clubhouse, the pool, and all shared infrastructure through a private fiber and thermal network.
Life Above. Power Below.
The Smart Vault operates silently 12 feet underground — park, pool, and clubhouse sit directly above it. Residents experience every benefit without ever knowing a data center exists beneath their feet.
The 4-Stage Thermal Cascade
Every joule of energy used for computing is recovered and put to work for the community — in a precisely engineered cascade from hottest to coolest.
104°F output drives domestic hot water and residential hot tubs at zero additional energy cost.
Remaining heat drives absorption cooling — delivering carbon-free air conditioning across the community.
Cascaded thermal output maintains comfortable pool temperatures year-round — no gas boiler required.
Final-stage heat powers in-pavement snow melt and hydronic heating — eliminating salt, chemicals, and slip hazards.
One infrastructure. Four beneficiaries.
The Smart Vault is engineered to create value at every level of the real estate ecosystem.
Offer the most compelling marketing differentiator in residential real estate — AI-native infrastructure no competitor can match.
Lower HOA dues, higher resale values, and compute revenue streams that make your development pencil better than ever.
Private AI, zero-latency smart home control, free pool and hot tub heating, and resilient power — all included in your community.
Lower operational costs, grid arbitrage revenue, and amenities that run themselves — giving your board a sustainable financial future.
Infrastructure that earns its keep.
A vault deployment generates compute income, displaces operating costs, and delivers community amenities — making it one of the most thoroughly engineered community investments available.
Ready to bring a Smart Vault to your development?
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Security, privacy, compliance, and answers to the questions you should be asking — all open and accessible.
What Life Feels Like Here
The Smart Vault works 12 feet underground — silent, constant, invisible. Every benefit surfaces where residents notice it most.
Silent by Design
The vault is 12 feet underground. No exhaust fans, no diesel hum, no rooftop cooling towers — just quiet streets and clean air on every block.
Warm Pool, Every Month
Recovered compute heat keeps the community pool at 82°F year-round — no extra utility bill, no seasonal shut-downs, no compromise on amenities.
AI at Your Fingertips
Your private AI node is 200 feet away, not 2,000 miles. Sub-5ms response, zero cloud dependency, your data never crossing the neighborhood boundary.
Lower HOA Bills
Edge compute lease revenue flows back to residents as HOA credits — a recurring offset against monthly dues that didn't exist before the vault was built.
Always Connected
Local fiber mesh plus Starlink satellite backup gives your internet two independent paths. Grid outages and ISP failures don't knock you offline.
Resilient in Any Storm
When the grid fails, the BESS battery keeps the clubhouse, emergency lighting, and internet running. Your Safe Harbor is always lit and always connected.
Tuesday, in an NSV Building
Not the brochure version. The actual rhythm of an ordinary day, where the vault is doing its job in the background.
Hot shower, no gas bill
Domestic hot water comes off the vault's thermal cascade. The boiler the building used to have isn't there. The combustion permit isn't there. The annual inspection isn't there.
Snow-free walk to the car
Last night's storm didn't make it to the pavement. Hydronic loops under the entry corridor and ramp melted it on contact. No salt, no shoveling, no slip-and-fall.
Vault AI summarizes a contract
"Pull up the redline and highlight what changed." The document never leaves the building. The model runs on the resident's reserved GPU slice in the vault.
Pool already at temp
"Heat the spa to 102 by six." Vault AI pulls the heat from the cascade — at no marginal energy cost — and the kids' lessons start on time.
Storm takes down the grid
BESS islands the property in under a second. Lights stay on. Wi-Fi stays on (Starlink). Refrigeration, elevators, refuge spaces — all powered. Most residents don't notice until they see the news.
Compute earns while everyone sleeps
Off-peak hours run enterprise compute workloads on the vault. The earnings flow into the community amenity fund — paying down the same amenities that keep the residents warm.
Why Not Just Use AWS or Azure?
The honest answer: for many enterprise workloads, you can. NSV exists because some workloads — and entire categories of building infrastructure — are better served by compute that lives where the people and the heat actually are.
Compute Lives Somewhere Else
Workloads run in a hyperscale data center hundreds of miles away. The waste heat is wasted. Data crosses your perimeter to a third-party operator. The encryption keys live under that operator's terms. Latency is whatever the network gives you.
Compute Lives Under the Building
Workloads run on hardware in your basement. Waste heat pays for amenities. Data physically stays on-prem. Tenants hold their own keys. Latency is sub-millisecond. And the platform earns income that flows back to the community.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything developers, builders, residents, and HOAs ask before partnering with the NSV Initiative.
What exactly is the Neighborhood Smart Vault?
The NSV is a fully enclosed, underground edge data center installed at the time of community construction. It houses enterprise-grade, liquid-cooled compute racks, a battery energy storage system (BESS), fiber switching infrastructure, and a thermal distribution manifold — all in a single prefabricated unit roughly the size of a shipping container. It operates autonomously with remote management, requiring no on-site staff.
Is it safe to have a data center underground in a residential neighborhood?
Yes. Immersion-cooled systems have no open flames, no explosive gases, and no high-voltage exposure at grade level. The dielectric fluid used is non-toxic and non-flammable. The vault is engineered to full commercial data center safety standards — UL-listed, NFPA-compliant, with fire suppression, ground fault protection, and seismic bracing where required by local code.
How does the thermal system work without chemicals or salt?
Single-phase immersion cooling submerges compute hardware in a non-conductive dielectric fluid. The fluid absorbs heat and transfers it through a closed-loop heat exchanger to the community's thermal distribution network. No salt, chlorine, or chemical treatment is needed at any stage. Pool and hot tub water is completely separate from the compute cooling loop — the two systems never mix.
What happens if the power grid goes down?
The vault's integrated BESS automatically switches to battery power within milliseconds of a grid event. The clubhouse, emergency lighting, Starlink satellite uplink, and essential community systems remain fully operational. Battery capacity is sized for 4+ hours of full clubhouse operation, with modular expansion available. Enterprise compute tenants benefit from seamless UPS-grade power continuity throughout.
Does the Smart Vault affect home resale values?
Early data from comparable smart infrastructure deployments suggests meaningful premiums — typically 8–15% above baseline comps in the same market. Lower HOA dues, private AI, always-on internet, and amenities like a year-round heated pool create a uniquely defensible value proposition that traditional communities cannot replicate. Buyers recognize and pay for this difference.
Who owns the data processed in the vault?
Residents own their data. The NSV Sovereign Node architecture ensures AI processing, home automation data, security footage, and personal queries never leave the neighborhood boundary. Enterprise compute tenants operate in fully isolated partitions with zero access to residential data. The HOA or a designated community entity holds the infrastructure lease and governance rights.
How loud is it?
The vault operates at below 45 dB at grade level — equivalent to a quiet library or typical suburban ambient noise. Immersion cooling eliminates the high-speed air fans that dominate traditional data center noise, and the unit sits 10–12 feet underground behind a concrete cap. There is no perceptible noise at street level or in adjacent homes under any operating condition.
How long does deployment take from groundbreaking?
Roughly 18–20 weeks from site mobilization to community go-live: site assessment (2 weeks), engineering and permitting (6 weeks, run concurrently with development permits), vault excavation and placement (4 weeks), systems integration including cooling loops, fiber, and BESS (4 weeks), and commissioning and resident onboarding (2 weeks). The process is designed to slot into the existing construction schedule without adding to the critical path.
Who pays for the infrastructure?
The NSV Initiative partners with developers under a build-operate-transfer (BOT) or revenue-share model. In most structures, NSV funds or arranges the infrastructure investment, recoups it through enterprise compute lease revenue, and the community HOA receives a revenue share from day one. Developers pay no incremental capex beyond standard site preparation. Specific terms are negotiated per project during the partner onboarding process.
How does zoning and permitting work for an underground vault?
The NSV is classified as utility infrastructure — the same legal category as underground electrical transformers, stormwater retention vaults, and fiber conduit. It does not require a building permit in most jurisdictions. The enclosure is engineered to NFPA 75 (IT equipment protection), IBC structural standards for underground structures, and NEC Article 708 for critical operations power systems. HOA governing documents require a standard utility easement amendment handled as part of the development documentation package. Local municipalities have generally welcomed the project due to its district-heating and grid-resiliency credentials, and in several markets it qualifies for green infrastructure density bonuses or utility incentive programs. Detailed permitting guides for each state are provided during developer onboarding.
What size development does the NSV work for?
The NSV scales from 50-home communities (2–4 racks) up to 600+ home master-planned developments (20+ racks). A minimum of 50 homes is required to justify the thermal distribution infrastructure. For communities over 300 homes, multiple vaults may be deployed in a distributed mesh configuration, providing both redundancy and load balancing across the development.
Have a question not answered here?
Talk to Our TeamThe Vault Earns While the Building Sleeps
Residents and tenants get a guaranteed baseline of compute. Whatever capacity they aren't using — nights, weekends, off-peak windows, or simply unsubscribed headroom — is sold to outside buyers. That income flows back into the building.
Residents Always Come First
Every unit has a guaranteed baseline of compute, storage, and bandwidth on its own isolated slice. That allocation is reserved before a single cycle is sold to anyone outside the building.
Headroom Goes to Outside Buyers
Unused capacity is offered to vetted compute buyers — AI training jobs, inference workloads, scientific batch jobs, and rendering pipelines. They run in cryptographically isolated tenants on a different physical partition than residents.
Earnings Flow to the Community
The income from those workloads flows into a community amenity reserve. It pays down HOA dues, funds amenity upgrades, and offsets the building's operating costs — turning the vault into an income-producing asset for the people who live above it.
Distributed Compute Is in Demand
AI workloads need GPUs faster than hyperscalers can build new data centers. Compute that already exists — already cooled, already powered, already on the grid — is increasingly valuable. NSV vaults monetize that scarcity without building a single new megawatt of data-center capacity.
Isolation Is the Point
Outside workloads run in their own encrypted tenant on hardware partitioned away from resident workloads. They can't see resident data; resident data can't see them. Network paths are isolated. Operator access is logged. The model only works because the isolation is rigorous.
A way out of the “Minutes Era.”
Cloud agentic coding is metered by the minute, by the token, by the request — and the price keeps climbing. Vaults break the meter.
Every line of agent-written code is now a recurring bill.
Agentic coding tools have become indispensable to modern software work — and the single fastest-growing line item in most engineering budgets. Pricing is climbing. Rate limits are tightening. Long-running agents burn tokens by the minute. Teams are throttling usage just to stay inside their plans, and individual builders are hitting paywalls in the middle of a thought.
Run agents on infrastructure the community already owns.
A meaningful slice of vault GPU capacity is reserved for residents, multi-family tenants, and on-site engineering teams — including long-context, long-running agentic coding workloads. No per-minute billing. No per-token surcharge. No rate limits enforced from a server farm in another state. The only constraint is the GPU slice you've been allocated.
Read the agentic coding model →The future of residential infrastructure is here.
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