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PRIVACY
Ports & Logistics

Inside new £138m UPS º£½ÇÊÓÆµ air hub at East Midlands Airport

1.2m sq ft facility can handle up to 22,500 packages an hour but is almost silent during daytime hours

UPS

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ boss of global parcel giant UPS has described how the business is doing its bit to help consumers shop online in the post-Covid world.

The US business has recently opened fully automated 1.2 million sq ft º£½ÇÊÓÆµ air hub at East Midlands Airport, right in the heart of the country.

It can process as many as 22,500 packages an hour, making it the company’s second biggest European air operation after Cologne.

During daylight hours the £138 million warehouse – a maze of conveyor belts and ramps, sorting and moving packages between the airstrip and 22 HGV docking bays – is quiet.

It comes alive at night when six Boeing B767-300F jets drop off and collect that day’s shipments.

Flights come in from Cologne, Edinburgh, Belfast and Philadelphia, bringing parcels destined for the parcel company’s 70-or-so º£½ÇÊÓÆµ centres. From there they are delivered to homes and pick up points up and down the country.

The site mainly handles small packages up to around 80kg with clients ranging from people buying goods online or posting things overseas, to big fashion companies and online retailers sending things to customers in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

During the first lockdown staff said there was a big rise in the number of toys and even toilet rolls being shipped in. Since then the UPS workforce has helped move millions of items of PPE equipment and sent some 600 million vaccines – which will grow to 1 billion by the end of the year – to Europe, North America and a number of developing countries.