CBRE WORLDWIDE
Home
About GSCP
Our Approach
Case Studies
Client Testimonials
GSCP Members
Research Center
Contact Us
  : Port Information
    : Port of Baltimore
    : Port of Charleston
    : Port of Halifax
    : Port of Houston
    : Port of Jacksonville
    : Port of LA/Long Beach
    : Port of Miami
    : Port of NY and NJ
    : Port of Virginia
    : Port of Oakland
    : Port of Prince Rupert
    : Port of Savannah
    : Port of Seattle
    : Port of Tacoma
    : Mexican Ports
    : Port of Melford
    : Port of Saint John
    : Port of Vancouver
  : Port Logistics Members
Port of Charleston

CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA

With the most productive port in North America the Port of Charleston is an ideal combination of: deep water accessible to Post Panamax containerships, high capacity, highly productive port operations; and an integrated rail and highway system with access to 60 million people within 500 miles, Charleston provides highly efficient access to the global marketplace. The Port of Charleston directly serves more than 150 countries, with strong growth in India and other Asian markets. The central location, roughly halfway between Washington DC and Miami, offers prime inroads into the burgeoning US Southeast.    
   
Northern Europe and Asia are the Port's top markets, combining for 54%of the total volume however, more than 150 nations are served directly from the Port's docks. Service is provided through 40 shipping lines including all top 20 carriers.   
   
Why Charleston?  

  • Transit times of 1-2 hours from open sea to dockside, fastest on the East Coast 
  • Charleston has 45-feet of water at low tide and 50 feet at high tide, enough to handle 8,000 TEU ships
  • "Productivity Pros" average 41 moves per hour, per carne dockside and truckers average 20 minutes from arriving at the gate to wiping outbound ticket 
  • On dock rail transfers.  Near dock drays to rail heads minimize switching time and ensure early cutoff times are met 
  • Web based cargo availability system notifies clients when boxes are ready for delivery   
  • The southeast is the fastest growing consumption zone in the U.S. and the Port of Charleston offers the fastest growing consumption zone.

The port is fast becoming one of the most important ports on the east coast because of its capability to expand its strategic geographic locale and its continued modernization.  The top commodities across the Charleston docks include agricultural products, consumer goods, machinery, metals, vehicles, chemicals and clay products.  

The two major railroads of Norfolk Southern and the CSX offer daily container express services that provide customers with fast, efficient and economical transit to a bevy of key cities in the South, Mid-West, and the Mid-Atlantic.

PORT OF CHARLESTON SPECIALISTS

Robert (Bob) Barrineau
First Vice President
T 843.577.1157
robert.barrineau@cbre.com

RELATED LINKS

Last Modified: Friday, December 19, 2008   
©2009 Global Supply Chain Practice / Disclaimer / Terms Of Use / Privacy Policy