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A $19.4 million, 341,328-square-foot industrial distribution building in North Las Vegas requires five low voltage systems including structured cabling, access control, and DAS. MBK Industrial Properties, a Mitsui & Co. subsidiary, is developing this ground-up facility in the Sloan Lane logistics corridor. The estimated LV contract value is approximately $670,000.
A $19.4 million industrial distribution building in North Las Vegas requires five low voltage systems across 341,328 square feet, creating an estimated $670,000 opportunity for contractors in the Nevada market.
Project Overview
MBK Industrial Properties LLC is developing a massive 341,328-square-foot industrial distribution facility at 5250 N Sloan Lane in North Las Vegas, Nevada. The project carries a permit valuation of $19.4 million and represents the latest addition to the rapidly expanding Sloan Lane logistics corridor, a hub that already includes facilities from Prologis and other major distribution operators.
Permit records filed with the City of North Las Vegas show this is new ground-up commercial construction. The permit was issued in January 2026, and with only 2% of inspections complete, this project is in its earliest stages — a ground-floor opportunity for low voltage contractors looking to get in early on a significant industrial build.
The facility's scale — over 341,000 square feet of distribution space — places it among the larger industrial projects currently under construction in the Las Vegas metropolitan area, a market that has seen explosive growth in logistics and e-commerce fulfillment infrastructure over the past several years.
| Project | Industrial Distribution Building — Sloan Commerce Center |
| Location | 5250 N Sloan Ln, North Las Vegas, NV 89115 |
| Total Value | $19,376,485 |
| Building Size | 341,328 SF |
| Project Type | Industrial / Distribution |
| Status | Active — Early-Stage Construction |
| LV Score | 8/10 |
| Source | North Las Vegas EnerGov Permits |
Key Players
This project is backed by significant institutional capital, with a developer whose parent company ranks among the world's largest corporations.
| Role | Company | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Owner / Developer | MBK Industrial Properties LLC | Industrial development arm of MBK Real Estate, specializing in distribution and logistics facilities across the Western United States. MBK has previously developed the Clayton Commerce Center (190,306 SF) and other projects in the North Las Vegas submarket. |
| Parent Company | MBK Real Estate | A wholly owned subsidiary of Mitsui & Co., Ltd., a global Fortune 500 company. Founded in 1990, MBK brings over three decades of experience in developing, acquiring, and operating industrial properties. Previous joint ventures include partnerships with Chuo Nittochi and Core5 Industrial Partners. |
Low Voltage Systems Breakdown
This 341,328-square-foot distribution facility requires five low voltage systems spanning security, life safety, data infrastructure, and wireless connectivity. The scale of the building — nearly eight acres under one roof — drives substantial system complexity, particularly for fire alarm coverage and DAS signal distribution.
| System | Category | Scope Description | Complexity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Structured Cabling | Data/Voice | Backbone and horizontal cabling infrastructure for warehouse management systems (WMS), barcode scanners, wireless access points, and office areas. A 341K SF distribution facility typically requires extensive fiber backbone runs to support operations across a vast floor plate, plus dedicated cabling for shipping and receiving areas. | Medium |
| Security Cameras | Security | Comprehensive IP video surveillance covering loading docks, truck courts, perimeter fencing, interior aisles, and office entry points. At this scale, expect 80-120+ cameras with a centralized NVR system, PoE infrastructure, and outdoor-rated enclosures for desert climate conditions. | Medium |
| Access Control | Security | Card reader and credential management systems at all entry points, dock doors, office suites, IT/telecom rooms, and potentially restricted warehouse zones. Integration with the CCTV system for event-triggered video recording at controlled access points. | Medium |
| Fire Alarm | Life Safety | Full addressable fire alarm system covering 341,328 SF of high-bay warehouse space plus office areas. This scale requires extensive device coverage — smoke and heat detectors throughout, pull stations at exits, notification appliances with adequate coverage for high-ceiling environments, and FACP with monitoring. ESFR sprinkler system integration is standard for modern distribution facilities of this size. | High |
| DAS | Wireless | Distributed Antenna System to ensure reliable cellular connectivity throughout the steel-frame building. Large industrial structures are notorious for blocking cellular signals, making DAS critical for warehouse worker communication, fleet management tablets, and emergency communications. Requires carrier coordination with AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile for signal distribution. | High |
Estimated Low Voltage Value
With no database-provided LV estimate available, we calculated the estimated low voltage contract value using industry benchmarks for industrial/distribution construction.
| Total Project Value | $19,376,485 |
| Estimated LV Percentage | 3.0% (Industrial/Warehouse midpoint) |
| System Count Multiplier | 1.15x (5 systems) |
| Estimated LV Contract Value | $668,488 (~$670,000) |
At approximately $670,000, this represents a mid-sized LV contract that could be handled by a single well-equipped contractor or split across specialists. The fire alarm and DAS systems will likely command the largest individual shares — fire alarm alone could represent $130,000-$165,000, with DAS running $100,000-$135,000 depending on carrier requirements and building penetration analysis results.
For context, the Las Vegas industrial market has seen LV contract values rise steadily as distribution facilities incorporate more sophisticated technology infrastructure. Modern logistics buildings increasingly require robust wireless connectivity, advanced security systems, and automated warehouse management integrations that push LV budgets beyond traditional minimums.
Skills and Certifications Required
This project spans security, life safety, data, and wireless disciplines. Here is what contractors need in their workforce to compete for this scope:
| System | Key Certifications | Critical Skills |
|---|---|---|
| Structured Cabling | BICSI INST1/INST2, RCDD (design) | Cat6A termination, fiber splicing, Fluke testing, rack building, high-bay cable routing |
| Security Cameras | Manufacturer certs (Axis, Avigilon), CompTIA Network+ | IP camera installation, PoE networking, NVR configuration, outdoor mounting, desert heat-rated enclosures |
| Access Control | PSP (ASIS), Manufacturer certs (Genetec, HID) | Reader installation, controller wiring, credential management, CCTV integration |
| Fire Alarm | NICET Level II+, Nevada FA License | NFPA 72 compliance, addressable system wiring, high-bay device placement, FACP programming |
| DAS | BICSI RCDD, RF engineering background | Antenna placement, carrier coordination, signal testing, fiber distribution, building penetration analysis |
Entry-level technicians with BICSI Installer 1 or NICET Level I can contribute to cable pulling, device mounting, and conduit installation across the facility's massive floor plate. Mid-level techs with NICET Level II or BICSI INSTC will handle fire alarm circuit wiring, camera commissioning, and access control integration. Senior technicians with RCDD certification or NICET Level III will lead fire alarm system engineering and DAS design — both critical in a 341,000 SF steel-frame structure.
Contractors should verify their Nevada low voltage contractor license is current. Nevada requires a C-2D low voltage license issued through the Nevada State Contractors Board for work on security, fire alarm, and communication systems.
Market Signal
North Las Vegas has emerged as one of the fastest-growing industrial markets in the Western United States. The Sloan Lane logistics corridor, where this project sits, has attracted major institutional developers including Prologis, CapRock Partners, and now MBK Industrial Properties. The corridor benefits from proximity to Interstate 15, US Route 93, and the Las Vegas Motor Speedway area, providing strategic access to distribution routes serving the entire Southwest region.
The involvement of MBK Industrial Properties — backed by Mitsui & Co.'s Fortune 500 resources — signals strong institutional confidence in this submarket. MBK's decision to develop a speculative 341,000 SF facility suggests continued demand for large-format distribution space in the Las Vegas metro, driven by e-commerce fulfillment, last-mile logistics, and regional distribution needs.
For low voltage contractors in Nevada, this project represents the kind of opportunity that the industrial boom continues to generate. While individual LV contract values on industrial buildings tend to be more modest than hospital or data center projects, the sheer volume of industrial construction in the Las Vegas valley creates a steady pipeline of work. Contractors who build relationships with developers like MBK and position themselves as reliable industrial LV specialists can capture repeat business across multiple projects in the corridor.
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