CRG, Clayco Eye 1 MSF Savannah Warehouse

This build-to-suit will rise in a 764-acre industrial park.

The facility at 1864 Interstate Centre Blvd. in Ellabell, Ga.
The 708,990-square-foot facility that CRG sold last year is adjacent to the 77-acre land purchased by Lecangs. Image courtesy of CRG

Global 3PL company Lecangs has purchased 77 acres at The Cubes at West Port, a 764-acre master-planned industrial park in Ellabell, Ga., near Savannah. The seller, CRG, together with Clayco, plan to construct a more than 1 million-square-foot facility for the new owner.

Adjacent to the 300-acre The Cubes at Interstate Centre II, The Cubes at West Port will measure up to 5.5 million square feet at full buildout. The campus can accommodate tenants from 250,000 to 2 million square feet, providing build-to-suit and speculative development, as well as land purchase options.


READ ALSO: Industrial Momentum Slows Down


The industrial park is at 3438 US Highway 80 E., having easy access to Interstate 16. Downtown Savannah is some 27 miles away, the Port of Savannah is 26 miles southeast, while Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport is within 17 miles.

The location is also close to Hyundai Motor Group and LG Energy Solutions’ EV production facility and adjoining battery manufacturing plant that was announced last year. Battery production is expected to start late next year.

CRG’s presence across the U.S.

CRG has broken ground on, completed and planned more than 53 million square feet of industrial projects. The firm’s other developments in Georgia include The Cubes at Bridgeport, a 500-acre master-planned development, and The Cubes at River Park, a campus currently comprising 2 million square feet of speculative and build-to-suit space, both in the Atlanta market.

Last year, the company sold one of the industrial buildings at The Cubes at Interstate Centre II. Cosmetics company KISS will occupy the 708,990-square-foot facility.

Early this year, CRG completed The Cubes at French Lake, a 1 million-square-foot property in Dayton, Minn. The development is the largest speculative industrial project and the first super-bulk distribution facility in the state.