East Cobb Walmart files plans for drone delivery station

East Cobb Walmart files plans for drone delivery station
Walmart and a third-party company are delivering light parcels via drone in several areas of metro Atlanta. Walmart photo.

Representatives of Walmart will ask Cobb commissioners later this month to carve out a portion of its parking lot at its Johnson Ferry Road store to build a drone delivery station.

Filings with the Cobb Zoning Office indicate that Walmart would fence in the kiosk (indicated in the pink area on the map below), “no land disturbance is proposed and all proposed items will be anchor bolted to the pavement.”

Because Walmart would be amending the site plan, commissioners need to sign off on the proposal, which is scheduled to be heard April 21 during the monthly zoning hearing.

It’s an “other business” item (you can read the filing here), and zoning staff hasn’t yet offered an analysis.

The applicant is Rachel Sutherland, a project manager with Atwell, a national real estate and land development firm that is partnering with Walmart and a third-party drone service to develop the proposed East Cobb drone station site.

The Walmart deliveries would be for light parcels, typically under five pounds, and would cover a radius of a few miles.

East Cobb Walmart files plans for drone delivery station
Walmart would place a drone kiosk in the shaded area in the parking lot (Johnson Ferry Road is at the bottom).

Walmart is one of the first retailers to offer drone delivery services, and Atlanta is among the test markets (Amazon, Walmart’s main competitor, also is experimenting with drone delivery in certain area, but not Atlanta).

The East Cobb station would be the first such Walmart drone facility in Cobb County; the closest Walmart drone station currently is in Woodstock.

Walmart is working with the drone delivery service WING, which promises deliveries in less than 30 minutes.

The drones would travel at 60 mph at a height of 150 feet until reaching the delivery point, then would drop to around 20 feet to a driveway or yard.

Walmart has indicated it would provide deliveries only during daytime hours.

Residents in the vicinity have been receiving notifications from Walmart, and some have vowed to fight the drone kiosk.

One of them, Stefanie Stoltz, has written to commissioners asking them to turn down the request, saying that unlike other areas where Walmart operates drones, “this is a very residential area” and that what Walmart is asking for is “a misuse of zoning.”

She lives on Freeman Road, right behind the Walmart store, and is worried about noise, mechanical failures and other issues.

“This isn’t just a small operational change—it would fundamentally change the nature of what happens right next to my property,” Stoltz wrote.

“Living next to what is effectively a drone launch site—with constant noise, overhead activity, and safety concerns—makes my home less desirable to future buyers. This is a direct financial impact on me as a homeowner, through no choice of my own.”

What isn’t included in the Walmart filings is how drone activity might change if the delivery station plans are approved.

Drones are regulated by the Federal Aviation Administration, and Walmart has received permission to deliver via drone into the evening hours in some other markets.

It’s unclear if local governments could implement rules that could be overridden by the FAA.

More than anything, Stoltz, said, “I am also concerned about what this opens the door to. If this is approved, what prevents other companies or additional drone operators from using the same airspace or nearby properties? This could quickly multiply the number of drones overhead, turning an already concerning situation into a constant, unavoidable presence.”

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