Quantum computing could be commercial real estate’s next big tailwind

Breaking News: Technology News

Quantum computing could be commercial real estate’s next big tailwind
Diana OlickReal EstateBreaking News: Business
  • 📰 CNBC
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 271 sec. here
  • 17 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 150%
  • Publisher: 72%

Quantum computing is advancing quickly and becoming commercially viable. As a result, it now needs its own real estate.

Quantum computing is advancing quickly and becoming commercially viable. As a result, it now needs its own real estate . Companies like Microsoft, IBM, Google and Amazon are all making investments and breakthroughs in quantum computing.

The fledgling industry needs access to academics, infrastructure, an educated workforce, government support, private investment and public-private advocacy, according to JLL experts.A version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Property Play newsletter with Diana Olick. Property Play covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, from individuals to venture capitalists, private equity funds, family offices, institutional investors and large public companies.Just as artificial intelligence turned the data center sector into a gold mine, quantum computing is already ramping up to its own real estate revolution. Quantum computing uses quantum mechanics to solve problems beyond the ability of the most powerful classical computers. Until now, these super computers have mostly lived at academic or government facilities, because they have had limited practical applications. That's also why investment in quantum has lagged AI by about a decade. But quantum computing is suddenly now advancing quickly and becoming commercially viable. As a result, it now needs its own real estate. A new report from JLL says significant real estate implications are "on the horizon." "There's going to be a defined point in time where we've reached commercialization of the technology, where there's commercial utility, and at that point we see a significant ramp taking place to the scale of like what we saw with artificial intelligence," said Andrew Batson, head of data center research at JLL. "We see the private sector play really married to the point at which commercialization of the product takes place," he said.Parts of the IBM Quantum System Two are displayed at IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center on June 6, 2025 in Yorktown Heights, New York.Last year, quantum companies brought in less than $750 million in revenue, and startups focused on quantum technology collectively attracted about $2 billion in funding, according to the JLL report, which cited research fromsuggest quantum computing could see $20 billion in investments by 2030 and generate $100 billion in revenue by 2035, according to the report. "A potential 'quantum advantage breakthrough' around 2030 could trigger $50B in investments, similar to ChatGPT's effect on AI funding," according to the JLL report.CNBC's Property Play with Diana Olick covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, delivered weekly to your inbox. "The next big accelerator in the cloud will be quantum, and I'm excited about our progress," said Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella on the company's earnings call last month."Think pharma, agriculture and then material science, which really spans all types of manufacturing. Additionally, financial services. If we think about encryption, that's both a huge opportunity and threat presented by quantum," said Batson.With the vast majority of quantum computing currently living in academic or government institutions, it makes sense that the majority of new development to house it commercially will be concentrated in those regions. The fledgling industry needs access to academics, infrastructure, an educated workforce, government support, private investment and public-private advocacy, according to JLL experts. The top 20 global quantum markets today have formed near national research centers and universities. In the U.S., that includes Chicago; Boston; New Haven, Connecticut; parts of Colorado and Maryland and Southern California. Silicon Valley's PsiQuantum chose a Chicago steel mill complex to open a facility funded primarily by the state of Illinois. The Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park, developed by Related Midwest, is set to span 128 acres, or roughly 5.6 million square feet.Courtesy of the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park Batson called Chicago the poster child for private real estate development around quantum computing, but he noted that private development overall domestically still makes up less than 20% of the market.Quantum computing, for now at least, cannot live in the traditional data centers that house AI and the cloud. That's because the racks and the physical form of a quantum computer are different. Quantum computers also need electromagnetic shielding to prevent what's called "noise," which in this case refers to any outside disturbances, be they electrical, magnetic, vibration or sound. "The primary question I'm getting from clients is, does it make existing data centers obsolete? And the answer to that is no. Quantum computing is accretive to the existing data center infrastructure that exists," said Batson. "Is it redevelopment of existing? Is it brand new? It's all of the above." There are really two potential trajectories for quantum real estate, according to the JLL report. It could remain concentrated in today's existing hubs or move in with data centers. The argument for the former is that because it is a very specialized technology, there are really very few places that can support it at a larger scale. On the other hand, data centers could provide necessary cloud infrastructure for the quantum computing of the future. Integrating quantum with AI could make both more efficient. "It's a period of education and monitoring the development of the technology," said Batson. "We're just kind of waiting to see where it is, what it is, and how it happens."

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

CNBC /  🏆 12. in US

Diana Olick Real Estate Breaking News: Business Breaking News: Economy Economy Chicago Microsoft Corp International Business Machines Corp Alphabet Inc Amazon.Com Inc Business News

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Japanese AI Company Quantum to Acquire 3,000 BTC Amid Trade Agreements With USJapanese AI Company Quantum to Acquire 3,000 BTC Amid Trade Agreements With USCrypto Blog
Read more »

Physicists Create First-Ever Antimatter Qubit, Making the Quantum World Even WeirderPhysicists Create First-Ever Antimatter Qubit, Making the Quantum World Even WeirderIn its second antimatter breakthrough this month, CERN announced it successfully created the first-ever antimatter qubit, paving the way to even weirder quantum experiments.
Read more »

Physicists bring quantum mechanics and relativity closer to tame spinning electronsPhysicists bring quantum mechanics and relativity closer to tame spinning electronsResearchers came up with a new way to describe how an electron’s spin interacts with the material it moves through, without using the complicated and unreliable tool called the orbital angular momentum operator, which usually causes problems in crystals.
Read more »

In a first, quantum entanglement is made reversible with the help of unique batteryIn a first, quantum entanglement is made reversible with the help of unique batteryScientists have shown for the first time that entanglement, the mysterious link between quantum particles, can be reversibly manipulated just like heat or energy in a perfect thermodynamic cycle.
Read more »

Finland sets new quantum record with longest-lasting superconducting qubitFinland sets new quantum record with longest-lasting superconducting qubitResearchers in Finland pushed qubit coherence to 1 millisecond, a significant advance that promises more robust quantum computing.
Read more »

Quantum Computers Are Here and They’re Real. You Just Haven’t Noticed YetQuantum Computers Are Here and They’re Real. You Just Haven’t Noticed YetWe asked IBM Quantum’s director about the reality of the current state of quantum computing.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-04-01 17:16:17