Philadelphia

RushOrderTees Drops $16 Million On Massive Northeast Philly Warehouse Play

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Published on July 13, 2026
RushOrderTees Drops $16 Million On Massive Northeast Philly Warehouse PlaySource: Google Street View

RushOrderTees is going bigger in its own backyard, buying a 100,000-square-foot warehouse in Northeast Philadelphia for $16 million to beef up local production and fulfillment capacity. The move adds a hefty industrial footprint to a company known for fast turnarounds and high-volume e-commerce orders.

The 100,000-square-foot building at 2722 Commerce Way sold for $16 million, according to the Philadelphia Business Journal. That report notes the purchase comes as the firm’s parent has grown to more than 250 employees and now handles orders from hundreds of thousands of customers each year.

Warehouse and deal details

Commercial-listing records place the site in the Commerce Way industrial park and list the building at roughly 100,000 square feet, lining up with the size reported in local coverage. Market platforms such as LoopNet carry the property listing and specifications for the address, which confirm the industrial classification and square footage.

Growth at a hometown printer

RushOrderTees’ own site highlights a Philadelphia production hub and same-day shipping capabilities out of its local facilities, which helps explain the push for more room. The Business Journal coverage frames the acquisition as part of a multi-year scaling effort that has added staff and expanded the company’s fulfillment capacity.

Why this matters for local real estate

The purchase tracks with a broader industrial trend of owner-users and e-commerce operators locking in modern warehouse space as demand stabilizes. Cushman & Wakefield reported the U.S. industrial market entered 2026 with renewed momentum and vacancy stabilizing after recent cycles. For Philly-area readers, an owner-operator choosing to expand here signals continued local demand for well-located, ready-to-use logistics and light-manufacturing buildings.

Jobs and next steps

RushOrderTees lists production and warehouse roles on its careers page, suggesting the company will keep hiring even as it absorbs the new square footage. The firm has not yet published a detailed timetable for buildout or staffing at the newly acquired site.

In the meantime, permit filings, job-posting changes and any public notices about tenant improvements will be the early tells as the company works to bring the space online. We have asked for more details and will update when RushOrderTees or local filing records lay out specific plans.