Technology
Technology You Can Actually Use Not Silicon Valley hype. The gear, apps, AI tools, robots, and classes showing up in Spartanburg — and what's coming next for the Upstate.Spartanburg County has become one of the Southeast’s fastest-rising technology investment destinations, anchored by two headline commitments that signal a structural shift in the regional economy. NorthMark Strategies is constructing a $2.8 billion AI computing campus in Spartanburg County — among the largest data-center projects in South Carolina history — built to serve surging demand for high-density AI workloads. Upstate South Carolina drew further national attention when Apple announced its Atlas Park data center expansion in the region. Both projects depend on a targeted grid modernization program from Duke Energy, which is upgrading transmission and substation capacity specifically for data-center power scales. Spartanburg is no longer only a global manufacturing hub — it is becoming a measurable node in the nation’s digital infrastructure.
The institutions anchoring Spartanburg’s technology ecosystem span broadband providers, factory floors, and university campuses. AT&T Fiber has extended gigabit service across Spartanburg County; Spectrum and its parent Charter Communications, headquartered in the Greenville-Spartanburg corridor, operate the Upstate’s dominant cable broadband network. BMW Plant Spartanburg — the world’s highest-volume BMW production facility — runs a full Industry 4.0 and IoT stack: autonomous transport, predictive-maintenance algorithms, and real-time sensor feeds across every production line. The Milliken Innovation Center, operated by Milliken & Company on its Spartanburg campus, connects digital manufacturing to advanced materials science. The Wofford Center for Innovation and Learning and USC Upstate’s Hodge Center supply engineering and computing graduates directly to Upstate employers.
The day-to-day reality of Spartanburg’s tech sector depends on workforce pipelines, startup infrastructure, and the code-education legacy embedded in the region. OneSpartanburg coordinates technology talent recruitment, matching open positions with skilled candidates and making Spartanburg County’s cost-of-living case to professionals from higher-cost markets. The Greenville-Spartanburg startup ecosystem draws on Clemson University connections and shared co-working space to support early ventures with mentorship and capital. The Iron Yard — an Upstate-founded code school that scaled nationally before closing in 2017 — trained hundreds of developers who stayed in the region and seeded technical capacity across Spartanburg companies. BMW, Michelin’s North American headquarters, and Milliken sustain consistent demand for automation engineers, IoT specialists, and data scientists.
HERESpartanburg covers the Upstate tech beat in full: NorthMark Strategies’ AI computing campus milestones in Spartanburg County, Apple Atlas Park data center updates and regional economic impact, AT&T Fiber and Spectrum/Charter broadband expansion coverage, Duke Energy grid investments tied to data-center load, BMW Plant Spartanburg Industry 4.0 and IoT manufacturing developments, Milliken Innovation Center research partnerships, Wofford Center for Innovation and Learning programs, USC Upstate Hodge Center STEM news, OneSpartanburg tech recruitment pipeline announcements, and Greenville-Spartanburg startup funding rounds. If it computes, connects, automates, or launches in Spartanburg County — it’s HERE.