After the United States emerged from the Great Recession, something interesting happened: Cheap real estate and the rise of e-commerce collided, creating a warehousing boom.
Since 2011, more than 2.3 billion square feet of new warehouse space has come to market — enough room to comfortably stuff three and a half Manhattans inside. And while it's a world that is kept far from the box delivered to your doorstep, it's creeping closer every year.
Over the past seven months, Insider has been poring over maps, scraping data, and speaking with experts and people on the ground to understand how the rise of warehouses is affecting the country.
In our major new project, Warehouse Nation, we unpack both sides of the warehousing boom: While it brings new jobs and higher wages to blue-collar workers, it can also severely strain local infrastructure — and the human body.
How the warehouse boom changed the way America looks, lives, and works.
No comments:
Post a Comment