DSV Breaks Ground on 750 KSF Warehouse Hub in Metro Portland
The property will consolidate three existing facilities.

DSV broke ground last week on Oregon Regional Warehouse Hub, a 750,000-square-foot industrial project in Hillsboro, Ore. The facility is intended to serve as a purpose-built contract logistics space for DSV’s semiconductor customers throughout the state.
The project’s general contractor is ARCO Design/Build, and the building is expected to be completed by about July 2027.
The warehouse hub will consolidate DSV’s three existing Oregon locations—which total about 385,000 square feet—as well as its employees, into a single, purpose-built hub nearly twice that size. The company said this will give DSV the capacity and infrastructure to grow alongside its semiconductor customers for years to come.
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The facility will feature advanced security, customized inventory management solutions, warehousing, fulfillment and distribution services. It will have a 40-foot clear height, 53 dock doors and dedicated storage zones for specialty semiconductor materials, secured by 24-hour video surveillance and perimeter fencing. In addition, DSV’s AI-driven inventory management system gives customers real-time visibility into their materials, from receipt to delivery.
Hillsboro lies near the center of Oregon’s Silicon Forest, a region stretching across Washington County between Hillsboro and Beaverton.
Big moves by DSV
In January, DSV broke ground on a 950,000-square-foot Arizona regional headquarters in Mesa near the Mesa Gateway Airport.
Then in March, DSV Contract Logistics leased the entirety of Northlake 35 Logistics Park’s Building 1, a more than 1 million-square-foot distribution center in Northlake, Texas. The landlords are Falcon Commercial Development and Clarion Partners.
Metro Portland’s industrial space market presents a mixed picture, according to a first-quarter report from Kidder Mathews. The broader market is seeing significant softness, with increased concessions pressuring effective rents and sublease space remaining relatively plentiful. The small-bay sector is weakening, but stronger submarkets are nonetheless performing well.
One of those is the Sunset Corridor/Hillsboro submarket, which has a total availability of 4.0 percent on an inventory of 21.9 million square feet, Kidder Mathews reported.

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