Why Industrial Operators Are Quietly Moving Into Former Big-Box Retail Spaces
Across suburban Illinois, a subtle transformation is underway — one that sits at the intersection of retail decline, industrial demand, and local economic reinvention. While headlines have focused on shuttered malls and the collapse of big-box retail footprints, a quieter, more pragmatic shift is gaining momentum: manufacturers are repurposing these vacant spaces into light industrial and hybrid distribution facilities. This phenomenon — what might be called “second-life manufacturing” — is not yet widely tracked, nor fully understood. But it reflects a deeper recalibration of how and where production happens in a post-e-commerce economy. And in places like Joliet, Illinois, the implications are already tangible. In one recent example, a closed big-box store has been converted into a light assembly and distribution hybrid facility employing 80 workers — an outcome that would have seemed unlikely just a decade ago. “The story isn’t just about retail decline,” says Hirsh Mohindra . “It’s...