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Nordstrom Scraps Plans for Pacific Northwest Fulfillment Center

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Nordstrom is canceling plans to build out an omnichannel fulfillment center in the Pacific Northwest as the department store reins in spending and bestows its 1-million-square-foot Riverside, Calif. facility with the heavy lifting.

“We found that we can serve West Coast customers more efficiently from our existing supply chain network while avoiding additional costs to build out the facility,” said CEO Erik Nordstrom in a Tuesday earnings call.

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The CEO did not confirm the location of the facility in the call, but said the building was leased, and was intended for future use in the Pacific Northwest region.

In July 2021, Nordstrom leased 500,000 square feet of warehouse space at the 2.7-million-square-foot SeaPort Logistics Center in Sumner, Wash. Nordstrom had expected to be operational in the industrial park by 2023, but the space has yet to open.

The company currently operates nine centers in its supply chain network. Nordstrom did not list the Washington facility on its annual report filed in March.

Sourcing Journal reached out to Nordstrom.

Exiting the initial plan appears to be an extension of Nordstrom’s move to consolidate its supply chain operations on the West Coast. The company already shuttered a fulfillment center in San Bernardino, Calif. on July 1, relocating their operations to the Riverside facility. In 2022, Nordstrom also closed another omnichannel fulfillment hub in Torrance, Calif. that locally served the Los Angeles market, just three years after it opened.

Both closures occurred as the Riverside side has scaled to support demand, according to Nordstrom.

The Riverside site first opened in 2020 to both fulfill online customer orders and ship merchandise to stores, and was designed to give shoppers access to a broader selection of products to choose from and expedite delivery speed. It has since taken the role as the leading distribution center to West Coast, although the company also has centers in Ontario and Newark, Calif., as well as Portland, Ore.

That facility includes an automated storage and retrieval system that can store five-to-seven times more products than other sites with the same footprint, Nordstrom says. So ideally, this helps the department store achieve its goal of offering consumers more selection, while cutting the number of split shipments mailed out to customers.