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- AirTrunk open regional headquarters at Ocean Financial Centre, marking 10 years in Singapore.
- New office will house senior executives and teams across design and innovation, development, operations, treasury, legal, and corporate functions.
- The expansion is said to reflect a rising demand for AI and digital infrastructure.
Asia Pacific and Middle East hyperscale data centre provider, AirTrunk has marked a decade of operations in Singapore with the official opening of its new regional headquarters, located at Ocean Financial Centre.
In its announcement last week, the company said the new office, situated in Singapore’s financial and technology district, reflects the company’s long-term growth strategy and as a key regional gateway and global digital infrastructure hub.
Designed by Woods Bagot, the workspace incorporates employee-led elements such as wellness zones, flexible collaboration spaces, and energy-efficient design. The office is located within a BCA Green Mark Platinum Super Low Energy Building, said to align with the company’s focus on sustainability and high-performance workplace environments.
The headquarters will house senior executives and teams across functions including design and innovation, development, operations, treasury, legal, and corporate services. The company expects its workforce in Singapore to grow over the next few years as the country continues to serve as its Asia headquarters.
The headquarters will house senior executives and teams across functions including design and innovation, development, operations, treasury, legal, and corporate services. The company expects its workforce in Singapore to grow over the next few years as the country continues to serve as its Asia headquarters.
Since establishing its presence in Singapore in 2016, AirTrunk is said to have committed several billion dollars in direct investment across three hyperscale data centre facilities, with a combined capacity of 180MW IT load. In August 2025, it secured a S$2.25bn green loan to finance its second Singapore data centre, SGP2, which is said to be the largest loan and green loan for a data centre in Singapore at the time.
Robin Khuda, Founder & Chief Executive Officer, AirTrunk said Singapore has been fundamental to the company’s growth over the past decade and remains central to its long-term Asia Pacific strategy. He added that the launch of the new office reflects confidence in Singapore’s continued leadership in digital infrastructure and advanced AI ecosystems.
The expansion comes as Singapore continues to strengthen its digital infrastructure. Under the National AI Strategy 2.0, alongside an additional S$1bn investment in AI research and development announced in the 2026 Budget, demand for secure and locally hosted compute is expected to rise. This is driven by increasing AI workloads requiring low latency, strong governance, and close integration with the country’s research and talent ecosystem.
AirTrunk’s three data centres aim to align with national initiatives such as the Digital Connectivity Blueprint and the Green Data Centre Roadmap, with efforts aimed at supporting Singapore’s ambitions to be a trusted and energy-efficient hub for advanced compute.
Speaking at the opening ceremony, Josephine Teo, Minister for Digital Development & Information highlighted the importance of building a sustainable and future-ready digital infrastructure ecosystem. "As global demand for AI and cloud services accelerates, we will continue to welcome companies like AirTrunk that are deepening their presence in Singapore and advancing research and innovation."
Pee Beng Kong, Executive Vice President, EDB added: "AirTrunk’s decade long presence in Singapore, and its decision to establish its regional headquarters here, underscore Singapore’s role as a hub for global companies particularly in the technology sector."
Alongside its digital infrastructure investments, AirTrunk said it continues to contribute to Singapore’s social, environmental, and educational landscape through long-term partnerships focused on inclusion, sustainability, and community resilience.
These include initiatives with Daughters of Tomorrow to support digital literacy and employability for low-income women; Garden City Fund to support conservation efforts at Mandai Mangrove & Mudflat Nature Park; WWF-Singapore to support AI-enabled monitoring of illegal wildlife trade, and Singapore Red Cross Society to strengthen natural disaster preparedness.
"As hyperscale demand continues to rise, we’re deepening our partnerships, investing in local talent and advancing sustainable operations to support the nation’s digital ambitions and the region’s growing infrastructure needs," Robin shared.
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Lead image / AirTrunk LinkedIn
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