According to wwd.com, third-party logistics provider ShipMonk has launched its first apparel-specific fulfillment center in Louisville, Ky.—a 406,000-square-foot facility designated KY2 and its 12th warehouse overall. The Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based 3PL designed the hub to address the full operational lifecycle of apparel orders, from high-SKU-density picking and footwear assortment handling to fit-driven returns processing and soft-goods rework.
Apparel-Centric Infrastructure and Capabilities
KY2 integrates high-density storage, optimized picking zones, and dedicated rework stations into a single operation tailored for apparel. It features more than 300,000 storage locations and 60 dock doors. The facility supports bespoke services including hanger application, hang tagging, price ticketing, and poly-bagging—capabilities rarely standardized across general-purpose 3PL warehouses.
Reverse logistics is central to the design: ShipMonk’s in-house returns program inspects, grades, and routes all returned items. New or like-new merchandise goes directly to putaway; recoverable goods are restored and returned to inventory; non-recoverable items are dispositioned per client instruction. The company processes more than 15 return merchandise authorization (RMA) requests per labor hour across its network, on average. Its ‘quality guard’ service automatically photographs every returned item upon receipt and again after rework—providing verifiable condition documentation at both touchpoints.
Strategic Network Positioning and Performance Metrics
KY2 expands ShipMonk’s existing Louisville campus—located roughly 10 miles from Louisville International Airport, home of the UPS Worldport air cargo hub. The site enables two-day expedited shipping to 100% of U.S. consumers, three-day standard shipping to 86% of the U.S., and five-day economy shipping to 60% of the population. As a central U.S. hub, it complements ShipMonk’s recently expanded West and East Coast campuses: Las Vegas (800,000 sq. ft., 300,000 orders/month, scalable to 1 million during peak) and Pittston, Pa. (650,000 sq. ft., same volume capacity). Both serve as bonded warehouses, allowing clients to defer tariff payments on imported goods until sale.
This expansion follows the planned closure of ShipMonk’s San Bernardino, Calif. facility this summer, with a WARN Act filing on March 24 indicating 124 layoffs effective June 30. When fully staffed, KY2 will employ approximately 250 people, most representing net new positions. ShipMonk currently serves a 1,000-brand enterprise client list, reporting a 99.95% order accuracy rate across shipments to customers in 195 countries.
Leadership Perspective on Category Specialization
“Apparel brands need partners who understand the complexity behind every order—from returns, to presentation, to speed.” — Kevin Sides, CEO and co-founder of ShipMonk
Sides emphasized that KY2 reflects a “merchant-first approach,” designing fulfillment around how apparel brands actually operate—not around generic warehouse templates. He added: “Fulfillment shouldn’t slow brands down or force compromises. When it’s done right, it becomes a growth advantage. That’s exactly what we built here.”
The launch signals a broader industry trend toward vertical specialization in 3PL services. While DHL and FedEx have rolled out fashion- and beauty-focused solutions in recent years, and Amazon continues expanding its apparel logistics capabilities—including dedicated garment inspection and rework lines—ShipMonk’s KY2 stands out as the first U.S.-based 3PL facility purpose-built exclusively for apparel, from layout to labor training to technology workflows. For supply chain professionals managing high-velocity, high-return categories, such dedicated infrastructure reduces cross-contamination risk between product types, improves SKU-level traceability, and shortens time-to-restock for recovered items—critical factors in maintaining margin and velocity in omnichannel apparel fulfillment.
Source: wwd.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










