Simple Mining

The company behind the Cascade proposal — now a data center, originally a Bitcoin mine — in its own words and in independent reporting.

Simple Mining is a Cedar Falls–based company that proposed a facility at the Cascade Industrial Park, backed by the Cascade Economic Development Corporation. The proposal has changed: it was first put forward in early 2026 as a containerized Bitcoin mining operation, and is now described as a roughly 12-acre data center — consistent with the company's broader move into data center and AI infrastructure (see its data-center page below). Some early news coverage describes the original mining version; check Latest Updates for current status.

Primary / Industry

The company's own materials

Primary sources straight from Simple Mining. Useful for the company's description of the project, cooling, energy, and jobs.

News

News coverage

Independent reporting on the proposed Cascade facility and the wider Iowa expansion.

Quick reference

What's been reported about the proposal

The proposal has changed

The project was first proposed in early 2026 as a containerized Bitcoin mining operation (about 40 units on roughly four acres). It is now described as a roughly 12-acre data center, in line with Simple Mining's repositioning toward data center and AI infrastructure. Much of the news coverage below predates that change and describes the mining version.

Size and location

The site is in the Cascade Industrial Park, with about 15 acres reported as purchased from the CEDC. The original mining proposal was roughly 40 containers on about four acres; the current proposal is described as a roughly 12-acre data center.

Jobs and backing

Early reporting on the mining version cited an estimated six to eight jobs and CEDC support. Job and power figures for the data-center version may differ and should be confirmed in current city and CEDC records.

'Data center' vs. 'mining operation'

When first proposed, the CEDC president distinguished the project from a conventional data center, calling it a container-based mining operation. The current proposal is described as a data center — so the general data-center research collected on this site now applies more directly. See the Data Centers page.