
On Tuesday, a newly built Class A distribution warehouse at 6260 Mango Avenue in Fontana sold for $30.2 million, bringing a New Jersey clothing distribution operator into the Inland Empire logistics mix. The 113,930-square-foot facility, delivered in 2023, offers a 32-foot clear height, 19 dock-high doors and a two-story 6,162-square-foot office buildout. Its spot just off the I-210 and near major freight arteries gives the buyer quick access to Southern California ports and intermodal yards.
According to CityBiz, DAUM Commercial directed the $30.2 million sale, with its executives representing the seller, Magellan Value Partners. On the buy side, DAUM's Steve Haston and LA Commercial's John Lasiter represented the New Jersey-based end user. CityBiz identified that buyer as a clothing-based distribution company and quoted DAUM's Noah Samarin saying the deal "was the result of a strong collaboration" between the brokerage teams.
The Building and the Deal
Marketing pages show the freestanding building sits on roughly 6.1 acres and includes a gated truck court, ESFR sprinklers, LED warehouse lighting and tenant-ready loading equipment. LoopNet lists the 113,930-square-foot size and 19 dock-high doors, while JLL's marketing materials highlight immediate access to the I-210 and proximity to intermodal yards and Ontario International Airport. Brokers also note options for expandable power and installed levelers that make the site turnkey for high-volume apparel fulfillment.
Why Buyers Target Fontana
Research from DAUM points to steady occupier demand for modern, large-format space in the Inland Empire even as vacancy and availability have risen modestly with new deliveries, a dynamic that keeps well-located product competitive. The firm's latest market materials track net absorption and asking-rent trends across the region.
Local Reaction
Mayor Acquanetta Warren welcomed the new tenant, saying "the City of Fontana remains open for business and is proud to welcome its newest clothing company to the community," as reported by CityBiz. Neither the broker release nor city comments included a specific hiring estimate, but officials often point to distribution leases as generators of local jobs and sales-tax revenue.
For investors, the $30.2 million trade underscores that turnkey, high-clear, freeway-adjacent product in the Inland Empire still draws buyers despite softer macro headlines. The asset's marketing pages and local listings now reflect the closed sale and remove a large move in ready option from the leasing pool, an outcome tracked in industry roll-ups and property databases. See DAUM for the asset's full specs and brochure.









