Loading organizations...
Hammerspace provides a global data orchestration platform designed to unify file and object storage silos into a single network-attached storage (NAS) resource, enabling high-performance data management and migration across data centers, AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud for AI workloads. The company has secured $156 million in total funding, notably a $100 million Series B round in 2025 led by Altimeter Capital, with participation from ARK Invest and strategic partner Saudi Aramco. Hammerspace reported 1,000% sales growth in 2024, serving enterprise IT, high-performance computing (HPC), and AI infrastructure sectors, including large companies and national labs. CEO David Flynn has indicated a potential IPO in 2025, citing rapid growth and significant customer acquisition. Hammerspace was founded in 2018 by David Flynn and Trond Myklebust.
Hammerspace has raised $157.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Hammerspace has raised $157.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Hammerspace is a software-defined data platform that unifies unstructured data across on-premises, hybrid cloud, and multi-cloud environments, enabling high-performance access for AI, machine learning, high-performance computing (HPC), and other data-intensive workloads without vendor lock-in or data migrations.[1][4][5] It serves enterprises in industries like media & entertainment, life sciences, financial services, public sector, game development, higher education, and enterprise IT, solving critical problems such as data silos (affecting 73% of enterprise data), slow access to GPUs, metadata gaps, and file management inefficiencies that hinder AI projects (with 87% failing to reach production).[2][5] The platform's growth momentum is strong, with a focus on AI-ready infrastructure that leverages existing storage via "Tier 0" activation of underutilized NVMe in GPU nodes, automated data orchestration, and parallel I/O for extreme throughput, positioning it as a fast-growing company since 2018.[2][3][5]
Hammerspace was founded in 2018 by storage industry veteran David Flynn, who brought expertise from prior ventures to address longstanding issues in file storage infrastructure that lag behind modern data analysis tools.[3][5][6] The idea emerged from recognizing "data gravity"—the challenge of accessing and mobilizing unstructured data across silos, clouds, and locations without latency or disruptions—particularly as AI and HPC demands exploded.[3][6] Early traction came from its innovative Data Orchestration System (DOS), a multi-layered architecture including data storage services, orchestration, parallel global file system, and access layers, which seamlessly assimilates data into a unified namespace, enabling low-latency performance over heterogeneous storage from any vendor.[5][6] Pivotal moments include refining messaging around AI acceleration and demonstrating HPC-grade parallelism via open standards like NFS, allowing enterprises to orchestrate data to GPUs faster without new hardware.[3][4]
Hammerspace rides the explosive growth of AI and generative AI, where data bottlenecks—not GPU shortages—stall 87% of projects, by transforming siloed, unstructured data (the bulk of enterprise data) into instantly accessible fuel for workflows.[2][3] Timing is ideal amid hybrid cloud proliferation and "data gravity" challenges, as market forces like rising AI compute demands and cost pressures favor solutions that maximize existing infrastructure over rip-and-replace.[4][5] It influences the ecosystem by enabling "AI anywhere" on open standards, fostering collaboration in AI factories, accelerating insights in life sciences/genomics and media VFX, and reducing AI development friction—positioning it as an overlay that democratizes high-performance data for non-HPC enterprises.[1][3][6]
Hammerspace is poised to expand as the "data platform for AI anywhere," with upcoming emphasis on enriching metadata for advanced AI models, deeper GPU integration, and edge-to-cloud orchestration to handle exploding unstructured data volumes.[2][4] Trends like AI factories, multi-cloud mandates, and sustainability-driven infrastructure reuse will propel it, potentially evolving its influence from niche HPC/AI enabler to standard enterprise data layer. As data gravity intensifies with trillion-parameter models, Hammerspace's lock-in-free unification could redefine workflows, unlocking value from trapped data and sustaining its fast growth.[3][6]
Hammerspace has raised $157.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $100.0M Series B in April 2025.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 1, 2025 | $100M Series B | — | E1 Ventures, Founder Collective, K2 Global, Point72 Ventures, Snowpoint Ventures, Virginia Venture Partners, Worldview Capital, Catherine Wood, Natasha Ahmed, Sahin Boydas, Shivon Zilis, Thomas Tull | Announced |
| Jul 1, 2023 | $57M Series A | — | E1 Ventures, Founder Collective, K2 Global, Point72 Ventures, Snowpoint Ventures, Virginia Venture Partners, Natasha Ahmed, Sahin Boydas, Shivon Zilis, Thomas Tull | Announced |
Hammerspace has raised $157.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Hammerspace's investors include E1 Ventures, Founder Collective, K2 Global, Point72 Ventures, Snowpoint Ventures, Virginia Venture Partners, Worldview Capital, Catherine Wood, Natasha Ahmed, Sahin Boydas, Shivon Zilis, Thomas Tull.