MEXICO CITY, Sept 14 (Reuters) - Amazon (AMZN.O) on Thursday inaugurated its largest last-mile delivery center in Latin America, a warehouse in Mexico's capital, as it seeks to offer faster deliveries in one of the region's most populous cities.
The new Mexico City site, measuring 30,000 square meters (more than 322,000 square feet), is the largest Latin America "delivery station" for Amazon, referring to warehouses that specialize in last-mile deliveries to consumers.
Amazon also operates larger warehouses known as "fulfillment centers," which can be over 92,900 sq meters (a million square feet).
Altogether Amazon operates about 40 warehouses throughout Mexico, employing more than 8,000 people directly and another 32,000 indirectly.
Some 22 million people live in and around Mexico City, one of the biggest urban centers in Latin America.
Persons:
Mercado, Diana Frances, Ken Salazar, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, Daina Beth Solomon, Sandra Maler
Organizations:
MEXICO CITY, Mercado Libre, Walmart, Amazon, Thomson
Locations:
MEXICO, Latin America, Mexico, Argentina, America, Mexico City