1330 Campus Parkway in Wall Township — Courtesy: JLL
By Joshua Burd
The owner of a nearly 278,000-square-foot industrial building in Monmouth County has tapped JLL to secure a buyer or tenant for the property.
According to the brokerage team, which is representing SkyREM, the Wall Township facility occupies 26.55 acres at 1330 Campus Parkway and just off Route 33. Key features include its 33,300 square feet of finished office space alongside a highly efficient warehouse footprint, allowing it to function as what JLL described as a “true headquarters-style industrial asset.”
Equally notable is a rooftop solar installation that covers nearly 90 percent of the property’s electrical needs, providing a meaningful reduction in operating costs.
“We are extremely excited to partner with SkyREM on this assignment,” said David Knee, a vice chairman with JLL’s Northeast industrial team. “This solar-powered headquarters facility delivers the ideal combination of executive presence and operational efficiency for discerning companies. The Wall Township location offers outstanding accessibility while providing the professional environment forward-thinking organizations need to strengthen their market position.”
The listing team includes Knee, executive managing directors Gary Politi and Christopher Hile, Vice President Conor Walsh and Senior Associate Michael Viera. They noted that the 277,806-square-foot building has 36- to 38-foot clear ceiling heights and 25 loading docks, including four interior, as well as 58- by 48-foot column spacing and parking for 330 vehicles, making it ideally suited for modern distribution, light manufacturing and hybrid users.
JLL added that the property’s highway access puts users within easy reach of Port Newark-Elizabeth and New York City, while it supports efficient distribution across the broader Northeast. It also benefits from access to a deep labor pool with more than 60,000 industrial workers within a 30-minute drive.
The offering comes amid fewer new deliveries and improving absorption in New Jersey’s industrial market, the listing team said, with new construction slowing to its lowest level since 2019. Class A vacancy in the state fell to 6.5 percent at the end of 2025, driven largely by strong demand for high-quality space and a continued flight-to-quality, while tenants leased more than 43 million square feet last year to mark the second consecutive year above that threshold.



