Clarifying the Facts, Cloverleaf’s “Red Granite” Project Is Not Connected to Granite City

GraniteCityGossip.com February 7, 2026

A rumor has been circulating in the community suggesting that Cloverleaf Infrastructure’s project titled “Red Granite” is secretly tied to Granite City and that negotiations have taken place without public knowledge. This claim has caused unnecessary confusion, and it’s important to set the record straight with clear, verifiable information.

The title “Red Granite” is coincidental. It is a project name chosen by Cloverleaf for a large‑scale development in a Midwestern market, and the name happens to contain the word “granite.” Nothing in the project’s description aligns with Granite City’s geography, infrastructure, or public process.

The project is described as spanning up to 1,900 acres, supported by 345 kV transmission lines, and positioned to deliver up to 3.5 gigawatts of power by 2030. Granite City does not have a contiguous 1,900‑acre development area, does not have 345 kV transmission infrastructure, and has not taken any zoning or annexation action that resembles the timeline or scope described in Cloverleaf’s materials.

Cloverleaf has scouted Granite City, as many developers do when evaluating potential sites across the region. Scouting is not a proposal, not a purchase, and not a negotiation. It does not involve commitments, agreements, or approvals.

As of today, Granite City has received no application, no zoning request, no annexation request, no land purchase notice, and no project name associated with any developer. The city has publicly stated that no nondisclosure agreements have been signed, and no formal steps have been initiated by Cloverleaf or any other data‑center developer.

Granite City’s development process is governed by public procedure. Any project of significant scale must go through formal steps that include public notice, public hearings, and votes by the appropriate bodies. These steps cannot be bypassed or completed privately. If a developer ever submits a proposal, residents will see it, hear it, and have the opportunity to respond before any decision is made.

Rumors often grow when information is incomplete, but the facts in this case are straightforward. “Red Granite” is not Granite City. No data center project has been proposed here, no negotiations have taken place, and no commitments have been made.

Granite City residents deserve accurate information, and the record shows that no such project exists within the city’s current development activity. This situation grew out of misinformation that was shared and circulated on social media, and the original post has since been deleted by its author. Let it serve as a reminder of how quickly confusion can spread when claims are repeated without verification. Granite City residents deserve clear facts, not speculation, and taking a moment to confirm information before reacting helps keep our community grounded and informed.