Wednesday, July 15, 2026

As Shawnee County Debates Data Centers, Topeka Firm Offers Lean AI Solutions for Kansas Businesses

 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 13, 2026


Media Contact:

Colter Robinson, Founder

Dvelop AI

3626 SW 29th Street, Topeka, KS 66614

support@dvelopai.com

www.dvelopai.com


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As Shawnee County Debates Data Centers, Topeka Firm Offers Lean AI Solutions for Kansas Businesses


TOPEKA, Kan. — While Shawnee County commissioners weigh zoning changes for hyperscale data centers that could consume up to 5 million gallons of water daily and draw electricity equivalent to powering 100,000 homes, Topeka-based Dvelop AI is taking a different approach to the AI economy.

"The hyperscale data center conversation in Shawnee County is about building AI infrastructure that won’t help local businesses," said Colter Robinson, founder and lead developer at Dvelop AI. “Our clients don't need a billion-dollar server farm. Our business focuses on taking the tools already available and optimizing them which helps conserve the energy and water that those data centers would’ve consumed."

According to recent reporting from The Topeka Capital-Journal, KSNT 27 News, and WIBW, Evergy is in active negotiations to bring a data center to Shawnee County under the codename "Project Deep Blue." GO Topeka President Rhiannon Friedman confirmed three active data center leads in the region's project pipeline.

The Lincoln Institute of Land and Policy estimates that a mid-sized data center consumes as much water as a small town, while an AI-focused hyperscale facility can require up to 5 million gallons daily equivalent to a city of 50,000 people. Electrical demand for such facilities ranges from the equivalent of 10,000 homes for conventional centers to 100,000 homes for hyperscale AI operations.

A Kansas data center's processing power is exported wherever the customer sits. Whereas, running purpose-built AIs can cut the data center middleman out entirely. Running an AI model on your own hardware cuts consumption by orders of magnitude and doesn’t require tapping into your municipal water supplies. 

A business taking this approach costs roughly 1/200,000th the power of a hyperscale data center. By guiding AI deployments toward lean, purpose-built solutions instead of brute-force scale, local optimization can deliver the economic benefits of AI without the multi-billion-dollar infrastructure. 

"We're not adding to the resource load,” Robinson said. “We're helping Kansas businesses use what they already have more efficiently."

Dvelop AI's office is at 3626 SW 29th Street in Topeka, with in-person consultations available for Topeka, Lawrence, Kansas City, and surrounding communities, plus remote services nationwide.

"Most Kansas businesses don't need massive data centers,” Robinson said. “Most Kansas companies just need smart AI tools to help their workflow. That's the layer we build, and it doesn't require new water lines or power plants to do it."

About the Founder:

Colter Robinson brings a rare dual background to the Kansas AI market. He is an award-winning journalist with nearly a decade of AP news writing experience, 3,500+ published articles, and coverage carried by more than 100 ABC, Fox News, and CNBC affiliates as well as Yahoo Finance, MSN News, and NewsNation.

Learn more at www.dvelopai.com.





Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Summary of the YouTube video: "JEDO Meeting September 13, 2023" (City of Topeka channel).

  Look back in time


Summary of the YouTube video: "JEDO Meeting September 13, 2023" (City of Topeka channel).

This is a recording of a Joint Economic Development Organization (JEDO) board meeting held on September 13, 2023. It runs about 2+ hours and covers routine approvals, presentations, and public comment. The link starts at ~13:00 (t=778s), which is during Item 3D: Henry McClure's proposal regarding the Travelers Inn on Topeka Boulevard.

Key Agenda Items (from description and transcript):

  • Approvals: Meeting minutes, 2022 JEDO audit report (clean/unmodified opinion, strong management noted), and an amendment to a POLO Custom Products incentive agreement.
  • Henry McClure's Presentation (Travelers Inn, ~10:12–~52:00): This is the main focus around your timestamp. You (as a real estate professional and MCRE, LLC representative) discussed revitalizing Topeka Boulevard ("Bring Back the Boulevard"). Highlights:
    • Progress on nearby deals (e.g., 32nd & Topeka Blvd with Chick-fil-A/Whataburger, Gordmans/Mainline purchase, Pizza Hut redevelopment).
    • Coordination with property owners (e.g., two different Patel family operators: one at Travelers Inn, one at Country Club Motel).
    • Proposal to demolish the Travelers Inn (a longstanding eyesore/motel issue) to improve the area, support retail development, and create "shovel-ready" land. You provided bids (~$197K–$217K range), a letter of intent from the owner, and emphasized police cooperation for safe operations/closure.
    • Broader vision: Treat Topeka like a tourist destination, focus on retail/infill, connect properties (including city land at 38th & Topeka Blvd for access/traffic flow), ripple effects to White Lakes, Briggs, etc.
    • You stressed adaptability in deals, vision for what the area can be, and willingness to work with stipulations or city assistance for demo costs.

Board response was generally supportive of boulevard improvements and motel removal (echoing past efforts like White Lakes). Questions focused on authority, costs, visuals/master plans, precedents for funding, and avoiding JEDO operational funds. No immediate vote/action was taken on the proposal; it was more of a discussion to explore options (potentially via city/Go Topeka channels). You expressed appreciation for the opportunity to present.

  • Later Presentations:
    • Countywide half-cent sales tax project annual update (infrastructure costs rising, revenue estimates).
    • Go Topeka quarterly report.
    • Astra Innovation Center update.
  • Public Comment and adjournment.

Overall tone: Professional civic meeting focused on economic development, incentives, audits, and local revitalization projects. Your segment highlights ongoing efforts to clean up and redevelop key Topeka Boulevard corridors, tying into broader goals like retail growth and reducing blight.

Jeff

 


For sale - 785.383.9994 (#mcre1)

 


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