Detroit Industrial Commercial Real Estate
135 results
More info
$8,151/month
$2,887/month
$116,465/month
$4,860,000 -
$755,989/month
$1,150,000
$337,154
$1,900,000
$950,000
$13,839/month
$111,000
$1,800,000
Lease:
More info
$700 -
$2,880/month
4,800 SF
$5,589,000
Lease:
$1,093,500/month
$4,150 -
$10,686/month
$2,450,000
Lease:
$17,500/month
$30
Lease:
More info
$249,000
$495/month
$148,494/month
$1,495,000
Lease:
$159,510/month
$5,834/month
$150,000
30,000 SF
$7,272,000
$550,000
Lease:
More info
$7/month
$850,000
$2,500 -
$25,500/month
51,000 SF
$1,933 -
$2,333/month
3,500 SF
$1,099,000
$249,000
$5,500,000
Lease:
$25,500/month
$695,000
$550,000
$1,800,000
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Industrial Commercial Real Estate in Detroit
Synonymous with American automobiles is Henry Ford and Detroit’s manufacturing muscle throughout the early 20th century. While the city’s reputation has waned in the last 30 years, Detroit is making a major resurgence in the industrial space, offering companies with large-scale building requirements a century’s worth of industrial and manufacturing space from which to choose.
After the city emerged from bankruptcy in 2014, longtime Detroit mainstays like GM, Chrysler, and Ford have thrived - as have their foreign competitors who have established American factories since the city’s decline over a decade ago. But most importantly, companies on the supply chain side who contract with major manufacturers in the city have grown alongside them, offering machine parts, manufacturing robotics, automation technologies, plastics, and metals for the world’s leading car manufacturers.
Today, Chrysler and GM are some of the city’s top employers, while energy companies like DTE Energy and Detroit Diesel provide thousands of jobs to the industrial, manufacturing, and energy production sector in Detroit.
While the Ford innovation of the assembly line still takes root when thinking of American automobile manufacturing, the realities of modern mechanization and robotics are closer to today’s truth. Companies like ABB employ over 500 people to build, maintain, and test robots for use in factories throughout the world - but the Detroit plant is meant almost exclusively for the automobile industry. But while they serve Ford, GM, and Chrysler, these specialized companies accommodate hundreds of other manufacturing-focused companies throughout the Detroit region - and offering high-paying jobs to qualified candidates.
Because of the city’s history of hard work and dedication in manufacturing, production, distribution, and trade, Detroit offers companies in those sectors ample opportunity to lay down roots or expand into one of America’s greatest industrial cities at an affordable and attractive overhead. Look toward areas like Rivertown, Nortown, and Grosse Point Park for easy access to logistics and transportation to the greater region.
Market Stats
Detroit has 719 commercial real estate spaces for lease, representing 14,724,305 sqft space.
660 buildings are available for sale.
In the past 30 days, Detroit has had 35 spaces leased.
Neighborhoods in Detroit, MI
Metropolitan areas near Detroit, MI
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