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Amazon opens smaller warehouses near big U.S. cities for faster delivery times

The Amazon logo at the company logistics centre in Boves, France, September 18, 2019.
The logo of Amazon is seen at the company logistics center in Boves, France, September 18, 2019.
Image Credit: Reuters / Pascal Rossignol

(Reuters) — Amazon has quietly opened a series of small warehouses closer to big U.S. cities in a move to shave hours off delivery times, the company told Reuters.

On Tuesday, the world’s largest online retailer is updating its same-day delivery program for shoppers in Phoenix, Philadelphia, Dallas, and Orlando, it said. Amazon will guarantee packages arrive by several set times daily.

The initiative underscores the company’s aim to stay quick in online retail, outdoing competitors’ free two-day delivery offers so shoppers remain loyal to Amazon’s shipping and media-streaming club Prime, which costs $119 per year in the United States.

Amazon has long offered one- or two-hour delivery via Prime Now, a service that includes fresh groceries and more than 20,000 items.


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The same-day offer will now guarantee delivery of more than 100,000 products, from phone chargers to dog food, in as little as five hours, from a new warehouse close to each launch city, said Jon Alexander, Amazon’s director of delivery experience. For comparison, Amazon offers more than 100 million items for two-day U.S. delivery or faster via Prime.

“The smaller selection enables us to put these types of facilities much closer to customers,” he said. Additional items — up to 3 million — will pass through the facilities on their way to same-day customers.

The new format combines the storage, picking, and packing functions of Amazon’s fulfillment centers with the sorting and delivery functions of other facilities in a single building.

Compared with fulfillment centers, which are farther from urban cores and house much more inventory, the new warehouse is roughly a tenth the size, at 100,000 square feet. Amazon says shorter drive times will help it meet its pledge on carbon emissions.

The company declined to comment on the facilities’ cost. Amazon, once famous for spending away profit, often cites warehouse build-outs as one of its biggest areas of investment.

According to Alexander, Amazon would typically lease existing spaces and alter them to accommodate the operation.

The new facilities are automated with the same “drive units” used in Amazon’s fulfillment centers. These are squat, floor-scurrying robots that hoist up movable shelves of inventory and bring them to associates who pick customer orders. Amazon said each building will create hundreds of full- and part-time jobs.

While the same-day option is covered for Prime members who spend at least $35, those without Prime are charged $12.98 per order, a tactic that could encourage people to sign up.

Amazon will announce more cities for the program later this year, Alexander said.

(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco, editing by Greg Mitchell and Kenneth Maxwell.)