Nearshoring is not only about factories — it is reshaping logistics. Warehouses and distribution centers are going up across Mexico's industrial corridors. Here is what it takes to build one well.
Why nearshoring drives warehouse demand
As manufacturing relocates to Mexico, so do the distribution and fulfillment networks that feed the US market. Proximity, USMCA access and growing e-commerce make modern warehousing one of the fastest-growing construction segments.
Site selection & logistics
A warehouse lives or dies by its location: highway and border access, proximity to plants and ports, land cost, and labor. CTECP covers Mexico's main corridors — Monterrey, San Luis Potosí, Querétaro, Mexico City, Puebla and Guadalajara.
Structure & clear height
Clear height, column spacing, floor flatness and load capacity define how efficiently a building can be racked and operated. These decisions, made early, drive both cost and long-term throughput.
Fire protection & MEP
High-pile storage requires fire protection designed to NFPA alongside Mexican NOM. Lighting, power, ventilation, dock equipment and — increasingly — automation all sit within the MEP scope.
Turnkey delivery
Delivering the warehouse under a single design-build / EPC contract gives one point of responsibility and a faster, more predictable handover than splitting the work across firms.
CTECP builds logistics & industrial facilities
With 250+ projects and 580,000+ m² built across 8 countries, CTECP delivers warehouses, distribution centers and industrial plants for global clients — one accountable, trilingual team.
