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Idaho Falls storage facility aerial

My Storage Idaho Falls is a multi-building self-storage facility serving one of the strongest secondary markets in the Intermountain West.

Idaho Falls sits at the crossroads of agriculture, energy (the Idaho National Laboratory), and outdoor recreation along the Snake River. The trade area pulls households from Ammon, Rigby, Shelley, and the Teton Valley corridor — a demographic profile that runs younger and more family-driven than the Idaho average, with the storage profile to match. Garages stay packed, basements stay packed, and conventional self-storage in Idaho Falls has run with high occupancy through every cycle since 2015.

Idaho Falls, ID · View map

The facility was designed as a phased multi-building self-storage complex. Climate-controlled interior buildings carry the premium-rent demand from households downsizing within town. Drive-up buildings carry the higher-volume, larger-unit demand from the seasonal-gear, RV-overflow, and contractor-storage base. Unit mix was worked back from the Idaho Falls market rent comps, not pulled from a vendor catalog: 5x5 and 5x10 for the high-margin small inventory, 10x10 and 10x15 across the broadest demand band, and 10x20 and 10x30 for the boat trailers and large household moves that drive the long-term tenant tenure.

Construction is pre-engineered metal building throughout. Eastern Idaho construction means real snow loads, and the Wasatch package on My Storage Idaho Falls was engineered to the actual ground snow load of the jurisdiction with stamped construction documents handed to the local building department for permit. Galvalume roofing resists corrosion, and walls and trim carry baked-on paint finishes built against peeling and fade. Door schedules are built around the EP3 corrosion-proof spring system.

Idaho Falls self-storage construction lives or dies on operating efficiency. Wasatch Structures designed and built the facility for a long operating life: low-maintenance steel construction, generous drive aisles for full-size trucks and the trailers that follow them, controlled gate access, and the on-site office and leasing presence that the Idaho Falls trade area still rewards. Multi-phase development means the operator can add capacity as the lease-up curve absorbs the first wave of supply.

Project highlights
  • 01Climate-controlled units
  • 02Drive-up access buildings
  • 03Multi-phase development
  • 04Pre-engineered metal construction
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