FluidStack
Controls Engineer, Capacity Delivery
About this role
Fluidstack is seeking a Controls Engineer to own building management and energy management system design, review, and commissioning for large-scale AI data center projects in Austin. You'll ensure controls quality across rapidly deployed gigawatt-scale facilities, reviewing integrator work and providing real-time engineering support during commissioning.
What you'll do
- Own controls engineering for assigned data center sites including BMS and EPMS design review and integration oversight
- Review controls submittals against company standards for architecture, points, sequences, and graphics
- Oversee integrator programming quality and send back work with specific feedback before field deployment
- Support commissioning activities from Level 3 through 5 with rapid engineering responses
- Ensure rework prevention by catching issues during design phase rather than in the field
- Contribute to standardized reference designs that improve each successive build
What they're looking for
- Building or industrial controls engineering on mission-critical projects
- Sequences of operations design and review
- Controls systems debugging and troubleshooting
- Integrator work oversight and quality assessment
- BMS and EPMS platforms (Niagara or Ignition preferred)
- Controls networking and integration
- Commissioning experience
- Technical documentation and standards review
Opens the official application on the employer’s site. No login required.
FluidStack
FluidStack builds AI infrastructure at scale, developing data centers and warehouse operations designed to handle gigawatt-capacity compute deployment. The company is hiring for warehouse engineers, data center operations specialists, product engineers, and people leaders to support rapid infrastructure expansion across multiple sites.
- Website
- fluidstack.io
Likely interview questions
- Walk us through a time you reviewed integrator work and identified a critical issue before deployment—how did you communicate it?
- Describe your experience with sequences of operations: how do you ensure they're correct and complete?