Tuesday, January 20, 2026

RMIT announces dedicated cloud supercomputing facility

The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) said using cloud would also provide it with the capability to run HPC applications with seamless access

The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) has announced plans for a dedicated cloud supercomputing facility, for driving innovation in research and education.

The university will leverage Amazon Web Services (AWS), which it said would allow it to provide elastic, secure, and scalable cloud infrastructure for researchers and students within RMIT’s industry hubs. RMIT said using cloud would also provide it with the capability to run high-performance computing (HPC) applications with seamless access.

The hubs focus on “Industry 4.0”, advanced manufacturing, space, fintech, digital health, and creative technologies.

The university added it was also working with connectivity provider AARNet, which will provide high-speed internet and communication services, and Intel, taking advantage of the chip giant’s capabilities in processing and storage.

Workloads such as genomic sequencing, autonomous vehicle simulations, and atmospheric modelling are often too large to run using traditional servers, a statement from RMIT said. HPC on AWS provides virtually unlimited compute capacity that meets the infrastructure requirements of almost any application, allowing researchers to process huge volumes of data to help solve some of the world’s most complex challenges in far less time — from disease prevention, extreme weather forecasting, and citizen safety.

Specifically, RMIT will leverage AWS Direct Connect, which establishes a dedicated private connection between the customer’s premises to the closest AWS data centre without using a generic internet connection, and enables customers to have low latency, secure, and private connections to AWS for workloads.

RMIT said the increased bandwidth would give researchers, students, staff, and industry partners the ability to experiment and test new ideas and discoveries involving large datasets at speed, which it hopes will fast-track the time from taking a concept and making it a product that can be taken to market.

Our collaboration with AWS, Intel, and AARNET to establish Australia’s first cloud supercomputing facility represents a step change in how universities and industries access HPC capabilities for advanced data processing and computing, RMIT STEM College deputy vice-chancellor and vice president digital innovation Professor Aleksandar Subic said.

Professor Subic said, by leveraging AWS Direct Connect, RMIT is set to access tremendous HPC processing power using a unique service model that provides seamless access to all our staff, researchers, and students.

Related Articles

Comments (0)

Average Rating: No ratings yet/5 (0 reviews)

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *