According to www.indexbox.io, the global warehouse buildings market is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.8% from 2026 through 2035, with the market index (2025 = 100) reaching 155 by 2035.
E-commerce Fulfillment Drives Largest Segment
E-commerce fulfillment accounts for an estimated 30% of all warehouse construction activity — the largest end-use segment. This demand stems from accelerating online retail penetration and rising consumer expectations for rapid delivery. By 2035, e-commerce sales are projected to exceed $8 trillion. The segment increasingly requires high-cube, automated facilities with integrated material handling systems. Key infrastructure trends include multi-story warehouse construction in dense urban areas and the adoption of robotic picking and automated sortation systems. Representative participants named in the report include Amazon.com Inc, Walmart Inc, Alibaba Group, JD.com, Shopify Inc, and Target Corporation.
Third-Party Logistics and Cold Storage Expansion
Third-party logistics (3PL) providers represent an estimated 25% of warehouse building demand. The cold storage segment is expected to outperform dry storage due to expansion in pharmaceutical and food e-commerce sectors. This reflects structural growth in temperature-controlled supply chains, especially amid rising global vaccine distribution and frozen meal delivery volumes.
Regional Growth Patterns
- Asia-Pacific will maintain the largest regional share, driven by manufacturing expansion and logistics modernization in China, India, and Southeast Asia
- North America and Europe will see moderate but stable growth, with emphasis on retrofitting existing facilities for energy efficiency and automation
- Latin America and the Middle East & Africa will experience faster growth from a lower base, supported by infrastructure investments and trade corridor development
Constraints and Risks
Key constraints include rising construction material costs (steel, concrete, insulation), labor shortages in construction and skilled trades, tightening environmental regulations and carbon emission targets, higher interest rates increasing financing costs for developers, and land scarcity and zoning restrictions in prime urban locations. The report notes that global warehouse construction activity entered 2026 amid a transition from a post-pandemic construction boom to a more strategic, efficiency-driven expansion phase.
Technology Integration Accelerates
Automation adoption is accelerating: new builds increasingly incorporate robotic picking, automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS), and integrated software platforms. Building information modeling (BIM) and AI-driven inventory management are reshaping building specifications. According to the report, supply chain resilience strategies — including nearshoring and inventory buffer builds — further support demand. The baseline forecast anticipates steady expansion supported by secular trends in e-commerce, supply chain reconfiguration, and technological integration.
Source: www.indexbox.io
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










