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2/23/23
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SkyBridge Arizona has broken ground on SkyBridge Building 109, the latest addition to its 435-acre mixed-use project immediately adjacent to the runway at Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport in Mesa, AZ.
Building 109 is the first of two 250k sf, Class A manufacturing/warehouse/logistics buildings that SkyBridge plans to break ground on at Gateway Airport during the first half of this year. This will bring their new building deliverables at the development to 500k sf, with space targeting air cargo, e-commerce, manufacturing and aviation and defense specialists.
In addition to providing immediate access to Gateway Airport, Building 109 will feature 32’ clear height, a 7” reinforced slab on 4” AMC, 30 dock-high and six ground-level doors, and generous power and parking. The building is divisible to approximately 80k sf, allowing it to serve a wide range of tenant types and sizes.
When complete, SkyBridge will be the nation’s first cargo hub with a joint U.S.-Mexico Customs inspection facility on site. The project is slated for 1.3 msf of aeronautical development, almost 2.2 msf of non-aeronautical development and 270k sf of commercial retail and office development.
The architect for SkyBridge Building 109 is ADM Group. The general contractor is Graycor Construction Company. Jackie Orcutt, Pete Wentis, Kevin Cosca, Jonathan Teeter and Alex Wentis of CBRE are the exclusive leasing brokers. According to Orcutt, the Southeast Valley is courting over 13 msf of active users in the market.
On behalf of SkyBridge, Graycor has already completed 134.5k sf of space in two buildings at the Gateway Airport site. The first is an 82.5k sf, Class A hangar building with office space and four bays to accommodate aircraft as large as a G650 business jet. The second is a 52k sf flex industrial building with 24’ clear height, storefront entries, administrative offices, conference and break areas, and a warehouse component with up to four docks. Both buildings are fully leased.
The SkyBridge master-planned development is located along the southwest portion of the runway at Gateway Airport. It is slated to become a first-of-its-kind Unified Cargo Processing (UCP) facility, allowing users to complete on-site cargo inspections and processing so that shipments between the U.S. and Mexico can be expedited directly to their destinations in Mexico.
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