Earlier this week, Thomasville, N.C.-based national less-than-truckload (LTL) carrier Old Dominion Freight Line announced it is again growing its national footprint, with the addition of six new and expanded facilities going back to February 2021.
Company officials said that each of these new service centers is constructed or renovated to provide best-in-class facilities to improve operations. And they added that the company’s recent investments focused on adding doors, upgrading its fleet and service center vehicles, and hiring additional drivers will allow it to manage ongoing capacity challenges as the economy rebounds post COVID-19.
“Our record-breaking first and second quarters demonstrate that freight demand is at unprecedented levels. We expect the growth to continue as the economy rebounds, so it’s important we continue to invest in capacity,” said Chip Overbey, senior vice president of strategic development at Old Dominion Freight Line, in a statement. “With our six new and upgraded facilities, we’re targeting some of the fastest-growing regions in the U.S. to ensure shippers in these areas have access to the superior transportation service they need to meet their own customer demand.”
Old Dominion’s new service center openings are located in Benicia, Calif., Phoenixville, Pa., and Kenosha, Wis., which brings its total count to 248 service centers, and it also relocated and/or expanded three more facilities in Colorado Springs, Colo., Milford, Conn. and Warren, Ohio. What’s more, in the past 10 years, ODFL has spent $1.7 billion in expanding its service center network, which is the equivalent of a 50% increase in door count during that period.
Specifics regarding these ODFL facilities are comprised of the following:
ODFL Senior VP of Operations Dave Bates told LM that the company is wide open with its real estate investments.
“We have always been at the forefront of doing that and have never really taken the foot off the gas, knowing that we want to keep expanding our network to be able to build our service center capacity and our door capacity,” he said. “The challenge we are running into now is that in select markets, where it is harder to find commercial real estate, and if you do find something, it often seems like someone does not want a trucking company near them so they kind of push back. We are facing that challenge as well.”
Bates explained that most of ODFL’s decisions as they relate to where and when to open up a service center are based on metrics included in what it calls a door pressure report, which measures the [number] of shipments pushing across each dock door over a period of time.
“As we see those numbers escalating in certain markets, that triggers the movement for some type of expansion or spin-off of a certain service center in that market,” he said. “That is how we gauge what we have done over the years, however, with things as tight as they have been with finding real estate, we have had property come available, or even a vacant service center come available, and we may not be ready today to expand in that market, but we might in the next four-to-five years so we will jump on something just to be able to have that resource when we need it.”