904 356-JOBS (5627)

904 356-JOBS (5627)

Industrial park advances in St. Johns with $1.4M+ in permits (Courtesy of the Jacksonville Daily Record) — More than $1 million of work was approved for ongoing development at a rising master-planned commerce park in St. Johns County.

It’s all part of Legend Point Logistics Crossings, developed by build-to-suit and project developers Scannell Properties.

Located near the intersection of U.S. 1 and County Road 210, the five-building industrial park will consist of approximately 845,000 square feet of industrial development with flexible warehouse sizes, rear load configuration and outdoor storage capabilities.

Buildings four and five were issued permits in Nov. 2024 at 330 Accolade Ave. for $11.99 million and 350 Accolade Ave. $12.9 million.

Interior buildouts of portions from each building were issued their respective permits Monday: $709,102 for Suite 100 of building four and $719,262 for Suite 100 of building five, according to county documents. Both permits were for an area spanning 2,618 square feet.

Tyler Newman and Jacob Horsley of Cushman and &Wakefield are handling the leasing.

Phase one of the industrial complex is complete and fully leased, according to the development’s website. Phase two is currently under construction and, when complete, will offer spaces from 42,000 square feet to 280,801 square feet, per the website. That phase is expected to be completed in quarter three of 2025.

Legend Point Logistics Crossings will also be the future home of Publix Super Markets’ pharmaceutical manufacturing facility, announced in Feb. 2024.

Aiming to be operational in 2026, the grocery chain plans to invest more than $145 million in the 168,000-square-foot warehouse, according to a county announcement in May 2025.

It is expected that the facility will initially employ about 115 people and could grow to as many as 400 in nine years. The facility will fill about 500,000 prescriptions per week when it opens, with the capacity to fill up to one million at maturity.

Initially dubbed “Project Krew,” the development is due to net $5.8 million in tax incentives for Publix if it meets all the goals for investment and job creation.