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ITC Millwork Opens 32,000 Square Foot Distribution Hub in Garner

ITC Millwork opened a new 32,000 square foot distribution hub and service center at 650 N. Greenfield Parkway in Garner to serve builders, remodelers and trade professionals across the Triangle. The facility consolidates customer pick up, delivery and trade support, and is intended to speed deliveries and improve service in the Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill market, a development that matters to local contractors and homeowners relying on timely materials.

Sarah Chen2 min read
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ITC Millwork Opens 32,000 Square Foot Distribution Hub in Garner
ITC Millwork Opens 32,000 Square Foot Distribution Hub in Garner

ITC Millwork has launched a new distribution and service center in Garner, bringing a 32,000 square foot operation to 650 N. Greenfield Parkway to serve the Triangle and nearby regions. The facility centralizes customer pick up, delivery coordination and trade support and adds dedicated customer service and order coordination space. The move was reported on November 12, 2025 by Woodworking Network.

The immediate practical effect for Wake County contractors and remodelers will be shorter delivery windows and streamlined order handling. By consolidating pick up and trade support in one local location, ITC intends to reduce transit times into the Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill market, which can lower on site waiting times and shrink the gap between material arrival and project schedules. For smaller contractors who rely on just in time deliveries to reduce inventory carrying costs, a nearby distribution hub can translate into more predictable scheduling and fewer delays.

From an economic perspective the new center reflects broader logistics trends that matter locally. Regional distribution hubs reduce last mile travel, which cuts transportation costs and can improve resilience against supply chain disruptions. For Wake County the operation can support employment in roles such as warehouse logistics, delivery drivers and customer service, while generating modest increases in local commercial activity at the site and for nearby suppliers. The facility also strengthens the supply chain backbone for residential construction and remodeling sectors that remain important contributors to the Triangle economy.

City and county planners gain a potential advantage when regional suppliers expand operations locally, because improved logistics can accelerate building timelines and support a more efficient construction ecosystem. Faster, more reliable deliveries may help keep project costs more stable, a point of interest given recent volatility in building materials and shipping. The center also creates a convenient point of contact for architects, builders and trade professionals seeking coordinated order management and technical support.

ITC plans a soft opening and an open house targeted at local trade partners, signaling an intent to integrate the new center with area contractors and suppliers. For Wake County residents the change is likely to be felt most directly through quicker turnaround on home projects and reduced material lead times for local builders. Over the longer term the expansion aligns with a shift toward more localized distribution in fast growing metro regions, a development that supports both business efficiency and local economic activity.

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