FluidStack
Controls Engineer, Commissioning Automation
Austin, TX$197k–$227kfulltimemidAdded today
About this role
Fluidstack seeks a Controls Engineer to design and execute automated commissioning sequences for data center infrastructure at scale. You'll develop functional test libraries, run live-site automated tests, and drive upstream improvements to control standards based on failure analysis.
What you'll do
- Engineer automated commissioning test sequences embedded in the control layer
- Build and maintain functional test libraries covering all devices and sequences in reference designs
- Execute automated commissioning on live sites and analyze test failures with field teams
- Disposition failures and identify root causes through trend data analysis
- Drive upstream fixes to design and controls standards based on recurring test findings
- Document test procedures and commissioning workflows
What they're looking for
- BMS or PLC programming (Tridium, ALC, Siemens, or equivalent platforms)
- Hands-on data center or building control system commissioning
- Test procedure development and automation
- Trend data analysis and diagnostics
- Control system design principles
- Electrical systems interface knowledge
- Analytics tooling experience
- Technical documentation and communication
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 commissioned a complex control system from start to finish—what was your role and what challenges did you face?
- Describe your experience writing automated test sequences in a BMS or PLC platform. What was the most complex test you've built?