In Mexico City, the challenge is no longer just finding square meters, it’s finding the right location. Traffic, delivery-hour restrictions, congested roadways, and the pressure to deliver faster mean that an operation that’s “far but cheap” starts paying the real cost in kilometers, time, and complexity.
When last-mile becomes both the biggest expense and the biggest risk, the question changes: how do you grow without leaving the city? That’s where vertical warehouses become a logical option for last-mile, e-commerce, and micro-fulfillment.
1) What is a vertical warehouse?
Simple definition: a multi-level logistics building designed for storage/fulfillment with controlled flows.
2) Why are they growing?
- In-fill: there’s no industrial land left in prime urban areas.
- Last-mile: distance matters more than “cheap m².”
- E-commerce: more SKUs, more speed, more returns.
3) Operational advantages (the real ones)
- Location: fewer kilometers = lower cost and faster delivery.
- More capacity where it matters (usable m² in urban zones).
- Phased scalability (you can grow level by level).
- Better operational control (zones by level: inbound / storage / picking / packing / returns).
4) Challenges—and how to solve them (no hype)
- Vertical flow: pallet elevators / freight lifts / conveyors.
- Bottlenecks: peak hours, insufficient staging, last-mile surges.
- Security and operations: clear rules, circulation, signage, access control.
- Power and technology: requirements for light automation (sorters, conveyors, WMS).
5) What types of operations benefit the most?
- E-commerce / omnichannel retail
- Parcel and last-mile delivery
- Dark stores / micro-fulfillment
- Spare parts / pharma / high-mix (high SKU count and turnover)
6) Quick checklist (for a lead magnet)
- Do you have major shipping peaks?
- Do you need to be within X minutes of the customer?
- Is your operation more picking than ultra-high racking?
- Do you need clear areas for returns and refurbishing?
- How many dock doors (gates) and how much staging do you need?
7) Vertical vs. traditional warehouse (quick mental comparison)
- Traditional: cheaper m², more yard space, more distance
- Vertical: closer, higher productivity per m², requires strong flow engineering
If your goal is to reduce distance and increase speed, a vertical warehouse may be your next step up. We can help you validate capacity, flow, and layout.
Schedule a tour:ebecerril@odonnell.com.mx | Mobile: +52 56 4160 1673