US information management company Iron Mountain has signed a deal with Iput to rent more than 15,000sq m of space at Aerodrome Business Park in southwest Dublin.
The Boston, Massachusetts, company, which is listed on the New York Stock Exchange, has leased Unit Q at the business park on a long-term basis. It joins Iput’s other main tenant on the site, Life Style Sports, which occupies the carbon-neutral 11,150sq m Unit G, using it as a distribution centre.
Unit Q is also built to the “highest sustainability standards”, Iput said in a statement on Friday, with Leed Gold, Breeam Excellent and Ber A3 ratings. It also features rooftop solar panels, electric car charging facilities and rainwater harvesting and recycling systems.
“To attract a global leader of the calibre of Iron Mountain for Unit Q Aerodrome Business Park is testament to our commitment to delivering the most sustainable logistics assets to the market, allowing occupiers to minimise their carbon footprint and operate in the most sustainable manner,” said Michael Clarke, chief investment officer at Iput.
Owen Doyle: World Rugby should leave the lineout alone and fix the scrum
Anjelica Huston: ‘There was no shame to having fun with playing women of a certain age’
‘Where I come from, people don’t do medicine. It’s not on your radar’: how a new generation of doctors is being trained
Secret Teacher: Too many school leaders bow to parent power. They bend the knee or rarely back their staff
“Our objective is to provide logistics units which surpass market expectations, and which will deliver strong income returns for our shareholders.”
Iput has a logistics assets portfolio of more than 2.4 million sq m across the State. The company could double that capacity after acquiring almost 18 hectares at the Nexus Distribution Park at Killamonan in north Dublin earlier this year for €50 million.
Mr Clarke said: “As occupier demand for logistics facilities continues to grow, we have a pipeline of 1.4 million sq ft of the most sustainable logistics facilities in the market to meet that demand.”