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Mark Zuckerberg arrives in Columbus on Meta's AI expansion trail.
The tech billionaire's Gulfstream G700 flight from New York underscores ongoing investments in Ohio's data center infrastructure.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Mark Zuckerberg

Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg, co-founder and CEO of Meta, touched down in Columbus, Ohio, aboard his newly delivered Gulfstream G700, tail number N3880, after a brief 74-minute hop from near New York City. The flight, departing around 4:34 p.m. Eastern time on May 5, 2026, reached a maximum altitude of 43,000 feet and clocked speeds up to 466 knots. This marks another jaunt for Zuckerberg, whose fleet—operated through the A7P Trust and sporting Meta's blue-and-white livery—logs thousands of miles annually, often drawing scrutiny for its carbon footprint.
The visit aligns with Meta's ambitious push into Ohio, where the company is constructing the massive Prometheus data center near Columbus. Set to come online this year as a 1-gigawatt AI supercluster, the facility represents a cornerstone of Zuckerberg's vision for advancing artificial intelligence amid fierce competition. With Meta's net worth tied to Zuckerberg's estimated $220-263 billion fortune, such trips blend business oversight with the quiet machinery of tech empire-building.
Zuckerberg's travel patterns, from his Palo Alto compound to recurring spots like Hawaii and Washington, D.C., now extend deeper into the Midwest. As Prometheus scales up—potentially rivaling Manhattan in footprint—the landing in Columbus hints at hands-on involvement in what could redefine regional economies, even as the executive's private aviation continues to fuel debates on sustainability in Silicon Valley's outer reaches.
Aboard the Gulfstream G700


The aircraft
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