The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Lobby crush: Online shopping leads to mountains of boxes

- By Katherine Roth

As online shopping becomes ubiquitous, so do the boxes delivered to homes across the country.

For apartment dwellers — and the managers of the buildings they live in — it’s tough to manage the boxes that pile up, sometimes clogging precious space for days. (If not watched, packages also can be stolen or left out in the rain.)

The problem’s only getting worse, says Rick Haughey, vice president of the non-profit National Multifamil­y Housing Council, which represents many owners, developers and managers of apartment housing. People are ordering more heavy, oversize and perishable items than ever before, he notes, and building managers are “tasked with finding new and creative ways to meet the demand for package storage, sorting and security.”

The problem is especially acute around the holidays, but continues all year.

“Now, you’ve got a lot of perishable­s coming in. And things like tires can be ordered online at discount prices. That means four tires are sitting in the leasing office, along with items like flat-pack furniture and even bed mattresses,” Haughey says. “They might be there for days or potentiall­y weeks if you’re away on vacation. There doesn’t seem to be perfect solution, but locker systems and delivery hubs come close.”

There are a growing number of technologi­es and services aimed at alleviatin­g the delivery problem in apartment foyers.

UPS, FedEx and Amazon all have begun offering services to help manage the flow of delivery boxes. The Amazon Hub program, for example, includes Amazon Locker, based at thirdparty locations like Whole Foods; Locker+, with staffed locations for pickups and dropoffs; and Apartment Locker, which accepts Amazon and non-Amazon packages in apartment buildings, among other services.

Luxer One, a company

based in Sacramento, California, provides secure lockers in buildings in the United States and Canada that can be accessed by both delivery companies and residents — including compartmen­ts for very large boxes and refrigerat­ed lockers for perishable­s. The lockers can be placed inside or outside apartment buildings, and are accessible

using codes.

“It’s a huge issue for a lot of apartment buildings. There’s a security factor, but also a convenienc­e factor. Building management offices aren’t open as late as some residents need them to be in order to retrieve packages, and in some cases, just accepting a building’s packages can easily become a full-time job,” says Melody Akhtari, spokeswoma­n for Luxer One, which started out in 2005 with lockers in apartment buildings for dry cleaning.

“A couple years in, a few buildings asked us if we could do something to help with all the boxes that were being delivered. In 2013, we launched across the United States and Canada, and our lockers are now in over 3,500 locations,” she says.

Along with smart lockers, there are services that arrange deliveries for a specific time when residents know they’ll be home; or let recipients have packages delivered to secure hubs or other locations that are convenient­ly located and open late.

 ?? LUXER ONE VIA AP ?? This photo provided by Luxer One shows a woman removing a package from one of Luxer’s access lockers in San Francisco, Calif. Luxer One provides secure lockers in buildings in the United States and Canada that can be accessed by both delivery companies and
LUXER ONE VIA AP This photo provided by Luxer One shows a woman removing a package from one of Luxer’s access lockers in San Francisco, Calif. Luxer One provides secure lockers in buildings in the United States and Canada that can be accessed by both delivery companies and

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