Amazon is quietly moving to plant a bite-sized warehouse in the shadow of Mile High Stadium, filing city permits for a 5,000-square-foot distribution center at 2030 N. Clay St. in Jefferson Park. The move is the latest hint that the company is threading micro-fulfillment hubs into Denver neighborhoods to shave precious minutes off ultrafast deliveries.
Public records reviewed by BusinessDen detail the Clay Street permit request, and Amazon spokeswoman Nissa LaPoint told the outlet in an email that the company plans to open “new facilities in Denver that will support fast delivery” as its launch playbook solidifies.
Small Hubs For 30-Minute Orders
The Jefferson Park filing lines up with Amazon Now, the company’s ultrafast delivery pilot that promises drop-offs in about 30 minutes in parts of Seattle and Philadelphia. Amazon News says the service relies on smaller, specialized facilities placed close to customers so thousands of everyday items can land on doorsteps in minutes.
Another Micro-Fulfillment Site Off South Broadway
BusinessDen previously reported that Amazon is also converting a roughly 4,500-square-foot building at 1860 Acoma St. for a similar role. Permit filings for that project, labeled “Project Peregrine,” list items such as produce, dairy, meat, beer, and beauty products. Those filings indicate Amazon is stocking groceries and household essentials at multiple compact urban sites to support the faster-delivery push.
How This Fits With Amazon’s Bigger Bets…