Vertical Warehouse (VWH)
TopicFrom the PointSav Documentation
A Vertical Warehouse is a 3–6 story multi-storey building used for light manufacturing, just-in-time logistics, and last-mile delivery in urban or near-urban locations — one of three Location Intelligence archetypes.
A Vertical Warehouse is a 3–6 story multi-storey building used for light manufacturing, just-in-time logistics, and last-mile delivery in urban or near-urban locations. The building type stacks functions that would traditionally spread horizontally across a ground-level industrial precinct: fabrication, component storage, assembly, and outbound dispatch.
Three-letter code: VWH. One of three Location Intelligence archetypes alongside Professional Centres (PRO) and Parking Structures (PKS).
[edit]What a Vertical Warehouse does
Typical tenant mix:
- Light manufacturing — electronics assembly, robotics integration, paint and coatings formulation, precision fabrication
- Just-in-time delivery — regional distribution hub for e-commerce and manufacturing supply chains; goods arrive by truck, are processed, and depart same-day or next-day
- Last-mile logistics — final sort and dispatch for urban delivery zones; proximity to dense population required
The vertical form factor is driven by urban land cost. Where a horizontal warehouse would require 4–8 acres at the urban fringe, a Vertical Warehouse achieves equivalent floor area on 1–2 acres by going up. Ground-floor truck access and dock levellers are retained; upper floors are served by freight elevators rated for forklift loads.
[edit]Where Vertical Warehouses locate
Spatial signature: 5–25 km from the nearest major metro centre, in the industrial-to-suburban transition zone. Located along multi-lane arterial roads or highway interchanges with direct truck access. Zoned industrial or light industrial.
What is nearby:
- Hardware anchors (Home Depot, Leroy Merlin, OBI, Bauhaus class) — building trades supply
- Auto-parts retailers (AutoZone, O'Reilly, Halfords) — vehicle maintenance for the fleet
- Tool rental branches (United Rentals, Sunbelt, Loxam, Kiloutou) — equipment for fit-outs
- Industrial MRO distributors (Würth, Fastenal, Grainger, Hilti) — fasteners, tools, consumables
- Flooring and tile supply (Floor & Decor, Topps Tiles) — finishing materials, contractor supply
- Lumber and building materials (84 Lumber, Builders FirstSource) — structural supply
What is NOT nearby: grocery hypermarkets, lifestyle anchors (IKEA), price clubs (Costco/Sam's Club in their consumer role). A VWH zone is defined partly by the absence of grocery-anchored retail.
[edit]Site selection signals
Essential — required for a viable VWH site:
| Signal | Threshold | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Highway interchange | ≤2 km | Trucks cannot use local residential roads for daily bulk delivery |
| Industrial landuse neighbours | Adjacent or within 500 m | Zoning compatibility; existing logistics ecosystem |
| Labour catchment | 300,000+ population / 30-min drive | Manufacturing and logistics roles require accessible workforce |
| Freight rail access | ≤2 km (where available) | Just-in-time component delivery; bulk raw material |
Significant — value-add:
| Signal | Threshold | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Air cargo airport | ≤20 km | Electronics components, rapid replenishment |
| Logistics hub (FedEx/UPS/DHL/Amazon) | ≤5 km | Shared last-mile infrastructure |
| Transit corridor | ≤500 m | Workers without vehicles need bus/rail access |
| Power substation | ≤2 km | Robotics and electronics manufacturing: heavy electrical load |
Disqualifying:
- Dense residential immediately adjacent (truck traffic conflict, planning restrictions)
- Flood plain (capital investment at risk; insurance prohibitive)
- Heritage or environmentally protected area (height and access restrictions)
- Inside an existing Professional Centres (PRO) cluster (wrong land use; grocery retail adjacent)
[edit]Production dataset
The VWH production pipeline uses DBSCAN-based clustering of hardware, trade-supply, and light-industrial retail chains. Calibration uses existing hardware store locations as proxy anchors: a calibrated build must place hardware anchors within 3 km of at least 73% of T1 and T2 clusters.
6,368 clusters across 17 display countries as of the June 2026 calibration:
| Tier | Count | Share |
|---|---|---|
| T1 Full Trade Hub | 852 | 13.4% |
| T2 Established Trade | 1,327 | 20.8% |
| T3 Emerging | 4,189 | 65.8% |
Country distribution (top eight by cluster count): US · DE · GB · CA · FR · NL · IT · PL.
T3 represents the majority because single-category hardware clusters qualify as thin VWH sites. Full trade hubs combining hardware, MRO industrial, tool rental, and auto parts are genuinely rare — this T3-heavy distribution reflects real-world site rarity at the T1 level.
[edit]Tier classification
VWH tiers use a group-collapse model: tier assignment is based on the number of distinct trade-supply category groups present in a cluster, not the total member count. A cluster with many hardware stores but no other trade categories does not qualify for T1; diversity across distinct trade categories is what matters.
T1 Full Trade Hub: At least two distinct trade-supply groups present — for example, hardware plus MRO industrial supply, or hardware plus tool rental. This indicates a genuine contractor and logistics ecosystem, not a single-category commercial strip.
T2 Established Trade: Hardware anchor with at least one secondary trade-supply category (auto parts, building materials, or flooring).
T3 Emerging: Hardware anchor present without additional trade-supply co-location. Single-category thin VWH sites.
The T1/T2/T3 tier labels used here are shared with the other Location Intelligence archetypes. For the general tier vocabulary, see colocation-tier-nomenclature.
[edit]The retail contamination flag
Nearly half of VWH clusters have a grocery hypermarket within 1 km. Hypermarkets do appear near industrial and warehouse districts at the urban fringe, particularly in Europe where industrial parks and retail parks often share access roads. Rather than excluding these mixed-use sites, the production dataset flags them with a retail_contamination indicator, noting that the site has grocery-anchor proximity.
A flagged site is not disqualified as a VWH location, but site selection analysis should account for the retail traffic and zoning dynamics that come with grocery-anchor proximity — these are mixed-use zones, not pure industrial precincts.
[edit]Data collection plan
[edit]Priority additions — Tier A chains (definitive VWH signal)
| Chain | Market | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Floor & Decor | US | Warehouse-format contractor flooring |
| Topps Tiles | UK | Contractor tile retail in industrial estates |
| United Rentals | NA | Deliberately co-locates next to hardware anchors |
| Sunbelt Rentals | NA | Same strategy; never in grocery parks |
| Loxam | EU | Tool rental; industrial estates |
| Kiloutou | FR | Tool rental |
| Würth | EU | MRO distributor; present in every EU industrial park |
| Fastenal | NA | Industrial MRO; always industrial-zoned |
| Grainger | NA | Industrial MRO |
| Hilti | EU | Precision tools; Hilti Centers in industrial parks |
| 84 Lumber | US | Lumber yards are definitionally industrial fringe |
| Builders FirstSource | US | Lumber/building materials B2B |
[edit]Taxonomy categories needed
flooring, tool_rental, mro_industrial, lumber, plumbing, electrical — these enrich VWH cluster member arrays but do not gate T1/T2/T3 tier logic.
[edit]Related Research
A companion academic study, Industrial Co-location in the Metropolitan Ring: Spatial Signatures of the Urban Fringe Archetype Across Eighteen Countries, is in preparation for intended submission to Regional Science and Urban Economics (Elsevier). The study applies the Vertical Warehouse archetype proxy criterion across eighteen countries using OpenStreetMap point-of-interest data and formalises the grocery-absence and hardware-presence co-location signal at continental scale.
[edit]References
- Warehouse — Wikipedia, accessed 2026-06-14
- Retail park — Wikipedia, accessed 2026-06-14
[edit]Data Sources
Map and location data © OpenStreetMap contributors / ODbL.