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Proximity to the Port of Progreso: the factor that can redefine a company’s logistics costs
Proximity to the Port of Progreso: the factor that can redefine a company’s logistics costs

In logistics, distance is not merely a geographical measure—it is a financial variable.

A company that consistently moves goods understands that logistics costs are not generated solely by the main freight. They also arise from short-distance transfers, waiting times, handling operations, fuel, equipment availability, operational staff, loading and unloading times, and the ability to respond to changes in demand.

For this reason, when an operation is linked to maritime trade, proximity to the port can have a direct impact on cost structure.

Progreso Hub is built on that premise. Its location—just 7 kilometers from the Port of Progreso, with direct access to the Mérida–Progreso federal highway—places it in a privileged position for companies that require efficiency in the movement of goods, containers, raw materials, finished products, consolidated cargo, or regional distribution inventory.

For logistics operators, freight forwarders, customs brokers, importers, exporters, shipping companies, food businesses, packaging firms, light manufacturing, or e-commerce companies, the ability to operate near the port enables a more compact supply chain, with fewer unnecessary movements and greater operational control.

This advantage becomes even more relevant when companies require industrial-scale space. At Progreso Hub, minimum lot sizes are designed for real operations—not for low-scale speculative uses. This makes it possible to serve companies with concrete needs: warehousing, maneuvering yards, distribution centers, industrial facilities, build-to-suit warehouses, or space for fleets and containers.

In addition, Progreso Hub is located within a corridor that already concentrates key operational factors: access to labor, services, transportation, commerce, energy, fuel, educational centers, and direct connectivity to Mérida. This combination reduces reliance on isolated locations and allows companies to establish operations within a growing industrial and logistics ecosystem.

The strategic value of Progreso Hub also lies in its forward-looking vision. The project is conceived as a platform connected to the critical axes of modern logistics: port, highway, rail, and energy. Its projected access to the Maya Train cargo network and the natural gas grid reinforces a long-term outlook for companies seeking not only to meet current needs but also to anticipate the growth of the Mérida–Progreso corridor.

The conclusion is simple: in port-related operations, proximity matters. And being close to the Port of Progreso—on a key federal highway and within a district designed specifically for industrial and logistics use—can represent a substantial difference in efficiency, costs, and expansion capacity.

Progreso Hub does not simply offer square meters. It offers a strategic position for companies that understand that efficient logistics begins with location.


Latest notes
Progreso Hub: A logistics-port district for companies with a growth-oriented vision
The expansion of the Port of Progreso and the new demand for industrial spaces in Yucatán.