Hamilton

Cargojet to move into new $12M airport facility

Overnight air cargo service Cargojet and airport officials announced Wednesday that the company has struck a deal to move into the Hamilton airport’s new $12 million Air Cargo Logistics Facility.
Construction will start this spring on the new Air Cargo Logistics Facility at Hamilton's airport. CargoJet will take up about half of the terminal. (John C. Munro Hamilton International Airport)

The new $12-million cargo terminal at Hamilton's airport has found an anchor tenant.

Cargojet, an overnight air cargo service, will take up about half of the 77,000-square foot facility, which is due to open in April 2015.

The service and airport officials announced the deal for the Air Cargo Logistics Facility on Wednesday. Construction is set to begin this spring.

The John C. Munro Hamilton International Airport is already the third busiest cargo airport in Canada in terms of volume. The Cargojet partnership is a "significant opportunity" to build on that, said Frank Scremin, president and CEO of the airport.

“Having secured the proper infrastructure and a partnership with Cargojet, Canada’s Cargo Airline, puts us in a great position to realize this," he said.

Two-thirds of the terminal's $12-million price tag is from the provincial and federal governments, and the agreement dictates the terminal be completed by April 2015.

The new terminal will include a 60,000-square-foot “cross dock” facility with truck docking stations and refrigeration for flowers, fresh produce and pharmaceutical products.

Its construction will create about 50 jobs. The facility itself will create as many as 400 direct and indirect spin-off jobs, the airport says.

Cargojet already has a presence at the airport. The company has recently signed new contracts with Canada Post and Purolator that could double the size of its business, said Ajay K. Virmani, president & CEO of Cargojet.

Six Airport Road residents wrote the city last year asking to sell their land because of the close proximity to the cargo terminal. But the terminal's location has changed so it no longer abuts their land, alleviating the need to purchase it, Guy Paparella, the city's director of growth planning, told CBC earlier this month. 

He plans to bring a report to council this spring.