
An Amazon-leased fulfillment center tucked along Salem Street in Wilmington just changed hands for roughly $100 million, putting a big-league price tag on a single-story warehouse north of Boston. The roughly 238,000-square-foot building, finished in late 2024, will stay in Amazon’s hands as a tenant under its existing lease, keeping the delivery giant firmly planted in the northern suburbs. The deal is the latest sign that institutional buyers are still chasing modern logistics space in Greater Boston.
According to the Boston Business Journal, the property at 800 Salem Street traded on April 30, 2026, for approximately $100 million. The outlet reports it was the second nine-figure transaction this month involving an Amazon-leased building in the region.
Lease and developer background
Amazon has signed on to occupy the full 237,000 to 238,000 square feet, in a project developed by a joint venture led by Camber Development with capital partner Wheelock Street Capital, as reported by Bisnow. The same outlet notes the building delivered in late 2024 and that JLL’s capital markets team was tapped to handle marketing for the site.
Property specs and site access
Developer materials put the facility at 237,880 square feet, with a 36-foot clear height, 47 loading docks, two drive-in doors and roughly 332 parking stalls, along with provisions for EV charging and a 130-foot truck court. Those specifications are detailed in the property brochure from Camber Development. The site sits about a mile from I‑93, giving relatively quick access to Boston and Logan Airport for last-mile distribution.
Local impact and permitting
On the ground in Wilmington, the project came with planning and traffic work. Local notices highlighted Salem Street widening and realignment tied to the facility’s easterly entrance, along with associated traffic controls during construction. Wilmington Apple published the town advisory that laid out the schedule and details for drivers.
Industry brokers say transactions of this size reflect steady investor appetite for stabilized, income-producing logistics real estate that supports Amazon’s last-mile delivery network. The pattern of Amazon-occupied properties trading to institutional buyers has been noted by Bisnow as part of a broader surge of industrial activity in the northern Boston suburbs.









