Passing through York, PA over the holidays I noticed an enormous building a few miles north of the City. Using the measuring tools on google earth, it appears to be about 850 feet by 850 feet square. From the Interstate it appears to be 7 to 9 stories in height. No signs of any type and no windows visible from the highway side.
Map coordinates are 40.03.55.47 by 76.45.31.56
Anyone know what the heck this building is? It’s an impressive sight in the middle of nowhere (sorry PA but it is in the boonies).
I looked on both Google Maps and Google Earth, those coordinates both point to a low resolution area. Are you sure you pick the coordinates of what you were actually looking at? The only way to be sure is to double click the object to center it, then pull the coordinates.
Y’know what that looks like to me? One of those distribution warehouses where all kinds of goods that are sent by truck are handled. If you zoom in close, you can see what looks like a bunch of tractor trailers parked both adjacent to the big building and in a parking area (staging area?) just to the WNW of the building.
Looks like I posted too late. Anyways, given the size, parking lot and the vast number of trucks lined up on the side of it, my guess is a warehouse or distribution point of some sort.
I live in the area and I was told it was - as you suggest - an automated warehouse. The person who described it to me tells me it is quite interesting inside, with machines that can pull stuff from shelving all over the building.
Dorjan, that’s the building! Never saw the loading docks from the highway and the trucks on the South side are blocked by a berm or slope in the terrain.
I double checked with the ruler in google earth and I’m sticking with about 800 x 800. A massive building that at least from the highway seems to sit in the middle of nowhere with nothing around it.
One question. In the States, how common is for a building like this to be blank? All the distribution centres I’ve driven passed in the UK have the company name on them in letters 20 foot high.