DHL injects $1.6M into new Indianapolis life sciences facility

DHL Global Forwarding opens new life sciences warehouse in Indianapolis. (Photo: DHL)

DHL Global Forwarding (OTCMKTS: DPSGY) has opened a 20,000-square-foot, temperature-controlled facility in Indianapolis that will cater to pharmaceutical and medical product shippers.

The $1.6 million facility has variable temperature capabilities to process all types of pharmaceutical, biotech or medical products that require strict temperature control, the company said.

The Indianapolis facility is one of eight “Certified Life Sciences Stations” that support DHL’s Thermonet service for temperature-controlled airfreight transport. Thermonet uses shipment sensors and an IT platform to provide customers with in-transit temperature visibility.

David Goldberg, CEO of DHL Global Forwarding USA (Photo: Courtesy)

The site is ideal because many large pharmaceutical companies are located in Indianapolis and it is next to the airport, David Goldberg, CEO of DHL Global Forwarding USA, told American Shipper.

DHL Global Forwarding is exploring the development of a dedicated life science freighter service linking Indianapolis with Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Goldberg said.

He said the ongoing investments by DHL Global Forwarding into its North American life sciences and health care logistics network is timely, since the coronavirus pandemic will likely result in more reshoring of pharmaceutical production to the region.

DHL and other larger third-party logistics companies have invested heavily in logistics services that cater to shippers in the life science and pharmaceutical fields.

Its contract logistics unit, DHL Supply Chain, in mid-July announced a 10-year service agreement with Siemens Healthineers (OTCMKTS: SMMNY) to oversee its product distribution in North America.

Siemens Healthineers will occupy about 260,000 square feet of a 422,000-square-foot, DHL Supply Chain-owned facility in Memphis, Tennessee.

Related news

Siemens Healthineers taps DHL to manage North American distribution

COVID-19 response boosts Deutsche Post DHL’s Q2 profit

Pandemic prompts DHL to beef up expedited LCL services

Click for more FreightWaves/American Shipper articles by Chris Gillis.

Upcoming FreightWaves Events
Fraud & Security

Freight Fraud Symposium

Double brokering. AI deepfakes. Identity theft. Freight fraud is an existential threat to the industry. Get ahead of it.

May 20, 2026
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame • Cleveland, OH
Register Now
AI & Technology

Supply Chain AI Symposium

Past the hype. Join operators, founders, and enterprise leaders figuring out how to deploy AI in supply chain.

July 15, 2026
The Old Post Office • Chicago, IL
Register Now
Rail & Policy

Future of Rail Symposium

Reshoring is rewriting freight demand. Join shippers, rail executives, and government officials to shape the next decade.

July 28, 2026
The Signal at Chattanooga Choo Choo • Chattanooga, TN
Register Now
Fraud & Security Freight Fraud Symposium May 20 • Cleveland, OH

Double brokering. AI deepfakes. Identity theft. Freight fraud is an existential threat to the industry. Get ahead of it.

Rock & Roll Hall of Fame • Cleveland, OH Register Now
AI & Technology Supply Chain AI Symposium Jul 15 • Chicago, IL

Past the hype. Join operators, founders, and enterprise leaders figuring out how to deploy AI in supply chain.

The Old Post Office • Chicago, IL Register Now
Rail & Policy Future of Rail Symposium Jul 28 • Chattanooga, TN

Reshoring is rewriting freight demand. Join shippers, rail executives, and government officials to shape the next decade.

The Signal at Chattanooga Choo Choo • Chattanooga, TN Register Now

Chris Gillis

Located in the Washington, D.C. area, Chris Gillis primarily reports on regulatory and legislative topics that impact cross-border trade. He joined American Shipper in 1994, shortly after graduating from Mount St. Mary’s College in Emmitsburg, Md., with a degree in international business and economics.