Why 644 2nd Street works for heavy truck & fleet repair
Most "truck repair" shops are car-sized buildings with one wide door. To work on real trucks — semis, dump trucks, vac trucks, refuse, fleet — you need a building where the truck fits inside with the doors closed. 644 2nd Street is one of the few small-bay options in the East Metro that delivers that.
- 14-foot tall garage doors — semis, dump trucks, vac trucks, and equipment trailers come fully inside
- 20.5 ft clear height in the larger bays — head room for hoists, lifts, and overhead cranes
- Drive-in bays + dock doors for parts deliveries and rolling truck movement
- Heavy power for shop compressors, welders, lifts, and tire machines
- 6,000–10,000 SF bays — two truck bays plus a parts room and an office
- 1.54-acre site for outdoor truck staging and customer drop-off
- $12–$15/SF NNN on a small-bay truck-shop layout
Common use cases
- Heavy-duty truck repair
- Dump-truck + vac-truck maintenance
- Fleet maintenance contractor
- Mobile crane + boom-truck service
- Trailer repair + alignment
- DOT inspection station
Building specifications
Building Size80,350 SF on 1.54 Acres
Min Divisible5,000 SF
Clear Heights12′ to 20.5′
Garage Doors14′ — clears semis & dump trucks
Loading5 Dock + 5 Drive-In
PowerHeavy Power Available
ConnectivityT1 Fiber Internet
Building ClassClass B Industrial
Year Built1956 (Additions 1963–1979)
Lease TypeTriple Net (NNN)
Frequently asked questions
Will a semi tractor and trailer pull inside the shop?
A semi tractor fits comfortably inside a 14-ft door with room to swing the engine cowl. A full 53-ft trailer needs to be parked or staged outside, but you can pull the tractor in for service while the trailer sits at the dock.
Can I install overhead lifts and a parts mezzanine?
Yes — clear heights up to 20.5 ft support 12,000-lb to 18,000-lb two-post and four-post lifts, with room for a parts mezzanine above the office. Lift installation is a tenant improvement we coordinate during buildout.
Is the floor strong enough for heavy trucks?
The building has been used for industrial purposes since 1956 and the slab is rated for industrial loads. For specialty lifts or unusually heavy single-point loads, we'd recommend a quick engineering review during your buildout planning.
Other concepts that work in this building
644 2nd Street is subdividable and adaptable. A few other use cases that match the building's bones: