Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Boxes pile up in online shoppers’ homes

- ERIC ROPER

MINNEAPOLI­S — The digital age has unleashed a torrent of cardboard boxes bound for homes as shoppers have everything from diapers to dinner ingredient­s shipped to their doorsteps.

Boxes are piling up in basements and garages, filling apartment building mailrooms and spilling out of overstuffe­d recycling bins. And they just keep coming — sometimes several a day.

“It’s kind of amazing,” said Dale Wood, who tends to a recycling drop-off center in suburban Minneapoli­s and sees a steady flow of people stopping by on Saturdays with cardboard that doesn’t fit in their curbside bins. “A person that just lives in a normal house would come with a whole truckload of cardboard.”

Nationwide, the U.S. Postal Service’s package deliveries are up 65 percent since 2009. The onslaught of boxes is changing recycling and traffic patterns, inspiring thieves and even forcing changes in building design.

The 360-unit Churchill Apartments in downtown Minneapoli­s receives 100 to 200 packages a day, with deliveries showing up more sporadical­ly as Amazon offers near-instantane­ous shipments using hired carriers. About 30 to 50 parcels ar-

rive daily at the 56-unit Elysian Apartments, packed with students, near the University of Minnesota.

“Amazon Prime is showing up 10 times a day at these buildings,” said Dan Oberprille­r, whose CPM Cos. manages the Elysian.

That means new apartment buildings need parcel storage areas, recycling chutes and reconfigur­ed mail rooms or high-tech electronic lockers, which send residents access codes to retrieve their packages, said architect Neil Reardon of UrbanWorks. The lockers take some strain off property managers, who are grappling with how to recoup the costs of the new service.

At single-family homes, some large curbside recycling bins just aren’t enough to keep up with the flow.

“That thing gets filled up fast,” said Tanner LePage, who has begun tossing boxes into the backyard until he can dispose of them. “I’ve thought of getting a trash compactor, but I looked it up [and] it’s like $1,000, $1,500.”

Despite the influx of boxes heading to houses, box

shipments nationally have remained relatively steady due to an accompanyi­ng drop-off in shipments to traditiona­l retailers, said Rachel Kenyon, vice president of the Fibre Box Associatio­n, a trade group.

With boxes going directly to consumers, companies increasing­ly want their products to stand out from the pile, said Neal Mintz of Minneapoli­s box manufactur­er Cedar Box Co. A client who ships car seat covers, for example, recently asked for a blaze-orange box. Twenty years ago, a brown box would do just fine.

“Nowadays people call us and they have an idea and a concept, and they want to talk through it and share their plan and talk about printing multiple colors and custom tapes and stickers,” Mintz said.

All those boxes sitting on doorsteps have proved tempting for thieves, too. Sgt. Jim Gray of the St. Paul Police Department said package thefts used to occur primarily around Christmas. Now they happen all year round, he said, estimating that there were about 100 in his western St. Paul district last year.

“In particular the last year

here, it’s been a more significan­t increase,” Gray said, adding that some thieves who don’t like what they find in the boxes have tried returning items to a brickand-mortar store.

Minneapoli­s police said 134 package thefts were reported in the city last year, up from just 36 in 2011.

Neighborho­od message boards are peppered with posts about purloined packages, as well as the occasional home security video of a suspect in the act. In early February, a 27-year-old man who stole boxes containing a mattress cover and a salon apron from a suburban home turned himself in after a relative saw video posted on Facebook and confronted him.

“It’s the proverbial catand-mouse game between the citizens and the crooks,” Gray said.

Some wonder about the environmen­tal impact of the growing piles of boxes.

Lauren Fischer canceled her subscripti­on to Blue Apron, a meal ingredient delivery service, partly due to the amount of packaging it used. Yet having Amazon Prime with a new baby still left her with piles of boxes.

“Sometimes you get a box

that has like one tiny thing in it,” Fischer said. “And it just makes me feel guilty, as someone who recycles and wants to not impact the environmen­t.”

And what about traffic from all the deliveries?

The Minnesota Department of Transporta­tion estimates that e-commerce will be responsibl­e for about 5 to 10 percent more freight traffic between now and 2030, spokesman Kevin Gutknecht said.

But Twin Cities residents are also making fewer trips to the store than they did in 2001, based on travel behavior data. University of Minnesota professor David Levinson said that, coupled with the logistics efficiency of profession­al delivery services, likely means there are fewer trips overall.

“There will be different patterns as a result,” he said. “So there might be more traffic on some streets and less traffic on other streets.”

He said further changes will accompany new delivery technologi­es, such as drones or robots.

“Every science fiction movie you’ve ever seen has robots doing delivery,” Levinson said.

 ?? Star Tribune/XAVIER WANG ?? Eric Webster, 33, drops off boxes from Amazon to be recycled in Maple Grove, Minn., earlier this month.
Star Tribune/XAVIER WANG Eric Webster, 33, drops off boxes from Amazon to be recycled in Maple Grove, Minn., earlier this month.

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