Camp Lejeune Marines just got a big upgrade in how they draw, turn in and fix their gear.
On April 14, Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps Carlos A. Ruiz joined base leaders for the ribbon-cutting on a new 109,000-square-foot Class II Logistics Facility. The building pulls together high-volume Individual Issue Facility work and the Class II Sustainment Program’s maintenance and repair mission under one roof.
One Roof, Fewer Headaches
Roughly 80,000 square feet now handle Consolidated Storage Program operations, including: issuing, turning in, inspecting, and maintaining individual combat clothing and equipment. The rest supports dedicated sustainment and repair functions.
What used to mean running between separate buildings is now handled in one place. Per the official release:
The improved layout allows parallel processing of units, clearer customer flow, and dedicated zones for inspection and maintenance.
This means units move through parallel processing instead of stacking up at different counters and waiting. Dedicated zones for inspections and repairs cut out the extra steps and get gear back into service faster.
Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps Ruiz spoke at the ceremony about what this kind of logistics support means for the force. He highlighted the hard work of Marine Force Storage Command and those who helped make it possible: "The people cared about the process."
The Commander of Marine Force Storage Command, Colonel Sharon Dubow, said during the ceremony:
We share the same vision. That the Marine who seizes the objective is equipped.
New Class II Logistics Facility – MCB Camp Lejeune
Ribbon cutting ceremony for new Class II Logistics Facility aboard Camp Lejeune (U.S. Marine Corps video by Corporal Daniela Chicas Torres)
Tech That Actually Moves the Needle
One of the standout upgrades is an extra Non-Destructive Test Equipment X-ray machine. It boosts inspection capacity for Enhanced Small Arms Protective Inserts (the critical plates in body armor) by two to three times. That means faster, safer checks and more plates cleared for use without delay.
Behind the scenes, damaged equipment now gets repaired and returned to the fight quicker, stretching the life of gear and keeping more of it mission-capable.
Marines can also schedule appointments digitally and pull up their individual gear receipts online. Those tools bring better accountability and line up with the Corps’ broader push for equipment visibility across the force.
Marine Force Storage Command called the site a regional distribution hub for Individual Combat Clothing and Equipment, with room for more automation in the works.
Built From Recovery, Aimed at Readiness
The project kicked off as a fix for aging infrastructure damaged by Hurricane Florence. Congressional recovery funding turned that basic need into a full modernization effort. What started as replacement work became a facility built to support Marines more effectively.
Real Impact on Marines at Lejeune
For the average Marine, this means less time chasing down gear and more time training, deploying, or operating with reliable equipment in hand. Faster issue and repair cycles keep units better supplied, which directly feeds higher operational tempo and overall lethality.
The facility is already fully operational. Marines at Camp Lejeune should check with their unit supply reps to schedule appointments through the Marine Force Storage Command online system. Walk-ins are possible depending on daily capacity, but appointments remain the quickest way through the line.
This consolidation is a straightforward win for getting Marines what they need when they need it, so they can stay focused on the mission.