Money  | 

Amazon Plans a Brick-and-Mortar Behemoth

Suburban Chicago location will combine groceries, general goods, online fulfillment
Posted Jan 21, 2026 3:00 PM CST
Amazon Plans Its First Massive Hybrid Store
The Amazon logo is displayed at a news conference in New York on Sept. 28, 2011.   (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

Amazon's next brick-and-mortar bet is anything but small: it's planning a suburban Chicago store big enough to outsize the typical Walmart—or two Targets. The company on Monday won approval to build a roughly 230,000-square-foot "big-box" site on what ABC7 describes as "a 35-acre bean field" in Orland Park, Illinois. It will be Amazon's largest physical store to date. About half the space will function as a conventional store selling groceries, household basics, and prepared food; the rest will serve as a back-of-house hub for fulfilling both online and in-store orders.

The store is designed as a hybrid of digital and physical shopping, and the Wall Street Journal gives an example: "Customers who see a sweater they like but prefer a different color could place an order at a kiosk in the store, then pick up the item at the checkout while paying for their groceries." Separate entrances are planned for online order pickups and delivery drivers, with workers assembling online grocery orders out of public view to avoid crowding the aisles.

Orland Park mayor James Dodge says it won't end up being a warehouse or fulfillment center. "When you say 'Amazon,' they assume it's a 3 million-square-foot building with four stories and 100 truck bays. That's not what this is. This is a large store," he tells ABC7. The yet-unnamed concept could open as early as late 2027.

Read These Next
Get the news faster.
Tap to install our app.
X
Install the Newser News app
in two easy steps:
1. Tap in your navigation bar.
2. Tap to Add to Home Screen.

X