
Baltimore trucking and logistics outfit Mid Atlantic Port Services has shelled out $5.7 million for a Southeast Baltimore warehouse and roughly 5.5 acres at 6101 E. Lombard Street, pulling a 30,253-square-foot industrial building under new ownership and setting the stage to pull its logistics operations under one roof later this year.
According to The Daily Record, MacKenzie Commercial Real Estate Services announced the deal and said Mid Atlantic plans to shift operations from nearby Fort Holabird Industrial Park later this year.
Property Details And Pastore’s Past
Commercial listings and tax data show the site covers 5.48 acres and includes a 30,253-square-foot warehouse with OIC zoning for industrial use. LoopNet carries the property record, while Pastore’s, the family food distributor that operated there for decades, still lists 6101 E. Lombard Street on its site. Pastore’s was acquired in 2025 by Elkridge-based Saval Foods, local business coverage reported, a move that likely set the stage for the building to hit the market.
Why The Location Matters
The warehouse sits less than a mile from Interstate 895 and within two miles of Route 40 and Interstate 95, giving trucks quick runs to the Port of Baltimore and key regional corridors. Mid Atlantic, founded in 1991 and known for moving military, State Department, and commercial household goods and vehicles, is expected to use the extra land for fleet parking and handling, according to The Daily Record.
What Comes Next
Analysts say Baltimore’s industrial market continues to favor infill sites with direct access to major transport links, which keeps competition stiff for single-occupancy warehouses. Research from CBRE points to tight supply across the mid-Atlantic industrial sector, a backdrop brokers say helps explain why an operating logistics company would chase a stand-alone site. For Baltimore, the purchase means Mid Atlantic is set to consolidate operations this year, a shuffle that could open up Fort Holabird space for new tenants or potential redevelopment.









