Construction of the one million square foot Hershey Company warehouse in South Annville Township is nearing completion, and the company expects the $178 million project to be complete and operational by the end of the year.

It will support Hershey’s business and retail customers across the United States, with an emphasis on the eastern U.S.

The “fulfillment center” on Killinger Road, south of Route 422, is bigger than 17 football fields and “will contain a variety of intermediate and finished goods along with necessary packaging materials, giving us unprecedented flexibility . . . to fulfill our retail customers’ orders for our products,” said company spokesman Jeff Beckman.

“We will begin fully hiring for the new facility in the next several weeks. “However,” Beckman said, “we have some Mechatronics Technician positions currently open and people can apply [here].” There are also operations jobs currently available at DHL Jobs and more will be posted there throughout the balance of the year.”

New Hershey warehouse in S. Annville Township dwarfs existing farm buildings. (LebTown)

Beckman added that the warehouse will “create 270 total new jobs full-time within the next three years, 35 of which will be direct, full-time Hershey employees.”

Read More: Hershey Co. plans million square foot South Annville Township warehouse

Read More: South Annville Hershey warehouse to receive $105K in state funding

Questions about this story? Suggestions for a future LebTown article? Reach our newsroom using this contact form and we’ll do our best to get back to you.

Do you want to see more from LebTown?

Support local news. Cancel anytime.

Already a member? Login here

Free news isn’t cheap. If you value the journalism LebTown provides to the community, then help us make it sustainable by becoming a champion of local news. You can unlock additional coverage for the community by supporting our work with a one-time contribution, or joining as a monthly or annual member. You can cancel anytime.

Chris Coyle writes primarily on government, the courts, and business. He retired as an attorney at the end of 2018, after concentrating for nearly four decades on civil and criminal litigation and trials. A career highlight was successfully defending a retired Pennsylvania state trooper who was accused,...