Storage & Racking - Logistics Business https://logisticsbusiness.com/category/warehousing/storage-racking/ News, Podcast, Magazine and More Thu, 19 Mar 2026 13:48:07 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://logisticsbusiness.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/cropped-LB-32x32.png Storage & Racking - Logistics Business https://logisticsbusiness.com/category/warehousing/storage-racking/ 32 32 CubeVerse Platform Launched for Fulfilment https://logisticsbusiness.com/materials-handling/automation-systems-shuttles/cubeverse-platform-launched-for-fulfilment/ Thu, 19 Mar 2026 13:48:02 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=66197 AutoStore™, a global supplier of intelligent fulfillment, today announces the ‘CubeVerse’ platform and new AI-driven capabilities, aimed to mark a major step toward self-optimizing fulfillment. AutoStore is introducing new cloud software, AI-powered analytics, and robotic workflows for order preparation and system optimization that can deliver higher throughput in existing systems without additional hardware. After more […]

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AutoStore™, a global supplier of intelligent fulfillment, today announces the ‘CubeVerse’ platform and new AI-driven capabilities, aimed to mark a major step toward self-optimizing fulfillment. AutoStore is introducing new cloud software, AI-powered analytics, and robotic workflows for order preparation and system optimization that can deliver higher throughput in existing systems without additional hardware.

After more than two decades of pioneering cube storage automation, AutoStore is now moving beyond automation alone toward intelligent fulfillment systems that continuously sense, decide, and improve in real time. The announcement reflects a shift in the market from asset-centric automation to decision-centric fulfillment, as companies look to connect machines, software, data, and people into more intelligent, coordinated operations. With CubeVerse and AutoStore Intelligence, AutoStore enables better, faster decisions across design, deployment, operations, and optimization—working alongside existing WMS and WES solutions rather than replacing them.

For customers, this means unlocking hidden capacity in existing systems, simplifying operations, and accelerating the path to fully autonomous fulfillment, powered by learnings continuously drawn from AutoStore’s global community of thousands of live systems, enabling improvements that compound across the installed base.

“Fulfillment is becoming a real-time, intelligence-driven discipline. If systems can’t sense, decide, and adapt continuously, everything upstream breaks,” said Parth Joshi, Chief Product Officer at AutoStore. “With the launch of the CubeVerse platform and our AI-driven capabilities, we’re bringing intelligence across the entire lifecycle — from design to daily operations to advanced analytics to optimizations. This is a major first step in our AI strategy and reinforces our focus on innovation as the market leader in automated fulfillment.”

The Spring 2026 product announcement introduces a new CubeVerse cloud platform, designed to unify data, applications, and AI capabilities across the fulfillment lifecycle, alongside AI-powered software and analytics, and expanded automation capabilities. Together, these capabilities lower total cost of ownership, improve performance and predictability, reduce operational complexity, and support longer operating hours, including full 24/7 operation.

After a decade of rapid investment in warehouse automation, the industry is facing a new challenge:
seventy-five percent of companies say synchronizing their supply chain is difficult as logistics networks grow more complex. The question is no longer just how to automate, but how to coordinate machines, software, data, and people into systems that make better decisions and run reliably around the clock.
CubeVerse and AutoStore Intelligence provide the data, simulation, and analytics capabilities that enable this shift — helping customers orchestrate fulfillment decisions across the system lifecycle without replacing existing orchestration or control layers.

The Spring 2026 Product Portfolio

Built on the CubeVerse platform, this Spring’s announcements span the fulfillment lifecycle—from system design and AI-driven optimization to autonomous order preparation.

CubeVerse™ Platform
CubeVerse provides a single platform to design, deploy, and run AutoStore systems. It spans the full system lifecycle—from design and simulation to deployment, operations, analytics, and optimization.
CubeVerse simplifies integrations, keeps operations consistent across sites, and helps customers avoid overbuilding and keep costs under control.

AutoStore Intelligence
AutoStore Intelligence applies built-in AI to real operational data across the platform to orchestrate fulfillment in real time. It optimizes robot movement through CubeControl, reduces congestion, and clears traffic bottlenecks to deliver significantly higher throughput during peak periods, with
performance continuously improving over time, without requiring additional robots or grid
expansion. Embedded across CubeVerse, AutoStore Intelligence uses 20+ proprietary models to predict issues, optimize operations, and deliver measurable performance improvements across the automation lifecycle.

CubeAnalytics™
CubeAnalytics, powered by AutoStore Intelligence, turns system data into clear, real-time insights and recommended actions. It helps teams identify issues earlier, reduce downtime, and rely less on specialized in-house expertise. With built-in AI, CubeAnalytics automatically surfaces key issues and patterns, evolving from reporting into an intelligent system that recommends action automatically.

CubeControl™
CubeControl, powered by AutoStore Intelligence, uses AI to personalize routing parameters and create optimized robot highways for large, robot-dense grids. This improves traffic flow, reduces congestion, and boosts overall system throughput without additional hardware.

VersaAI™
VersaAI delivers robotic piece picking powered by vision and AI, expanding AutoStore’s automation portfolio into autonomous order preparation. The system automates order preparation, consolidation, and staging, improving overall AutoStore utilization. It enables operations to run longer hours with consistent throughput and lower cost per order. This supports 24/7 operations without sacrificing performance.

CubeStudio™
First major application added to the CubeVerse platform, CubeStudio is a shared, cloud-based environment for system design, simulation, and validation, enabling AutoStore and partners to make data-led decisions together. It serves as an early proof point of AutoStore’s modern app strategy powered by CubeVerse.

Cube Enhancements
New workstation layouts and expanded bin and case support give customers more flexibility as volumes, SKUs, and workflows change, without requiring grid rebuilds. Enhancements based on partner and customer feedback include expanded case support in AutoCase, simplified WMS integration through VersaPort, and upgraded industrial PCs for large, high-performance systems.

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Another Full-range Distribution Centre in Sweden https://logisticsbusiness.com/warehousing/another-full-range-distribution-centre-in-sweden/ Wed, 18 Mar 2026 14:23:26 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=66164 In mid-December 2025, Swedish food retailer Axfood and the Witron Group signed a project agreement as well as the contract for remote and ‘OnSite’ services, thereby jointly initiating the realization of another full-range logistics centre. A 90,000 square metre highly-automated facility will be built in Kungsbacka (near Gothenburg) in southern Sweden, supplying more than 400 […]

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In mid-December 2025, Swedish food retailer Axfood and the Witron Group signed a project agreement as well as the contract for remote and ‘OnSite’ services, thereby jointly initiating the realization of another full-range logistics centre. A 90,000 square metre highly-automated facility will be built in Kungsbacka (near Gothenburg) in southern Sweden, supplying more than 400 stores with different dry, fresh, and frozen items. On peak days, more than 560,000 cases will be picked in a store-friendly manner using fully or semi-automated processes. The new project underscores the expansion of the strategic partnership between the two companies, which have already very successfully put one of the world’s most efficient omnichannel distribution centres into operation in Bålsta (near Stockholm).

“I am glad that we now have signed an agreement with Witron for automation in the logistics centre that we will establish. This solution will give us a more flexible, efficient and sustainable logistics chain for product supply to our stores in the southern parts of Sweden, thereby strengthening the entire Axfood family’s competitiveness,” comments Simone Margulies, President and CEO of Axfood.

Logical next step

“It feels very good to have the agreement in place for this strategically important automation solution. With the experience we have built together with Witron in Bålsta, we know that this technology will give us the right conditions going forward, and as a natural step, we feel confident in continuing this journey also in southern Sweden. This investment is fundamental in strengthening Dagab’s and Axfood’s future logistics structure, and for continuing to deliver on our ambition of market-leading efficiency,” says Hans Bax, Managing Director of Dagab.

High level of automation across all temperature zones

In Kungsbacka, products will be stored and picked across three temperature zones: ambient goods (+18 °C), fresh goods (+2 °C), and frozen items (-26 °C). As in Bålsta, the solution relies on standardized Witron logistics modules, including Order Picking Machinery (OPM with a total of 37 COMs), All-in-One (AIO), the Car Picking System (CPS), and a fully automated shipping buffer. Within this shipping buffer, store-friendly picked and consolidated order pallets are buffered and provided just-in-time on heavy-duty lanes, sequenced by delivery route for efficient truck loading. In addition, the Goods-to-Person (GTP) solution enables ergonomic semi-automated picking operations in the frozen food area.

High-performance warehouse management system

The overall material flow includes more than 500,000 storage locations for wooden and plastic pallets, roll containers, totes, and refrigerated containers, 111 stacker cranes, as well as 16+ kilometers of conveyor technology. All processes are controlled by a multifunctional warehouse management system with open interfaces from the WMS to the customer’s supplier systems, route scheduling systems, and sales systems. This enables a high level of end-to-end optimization across Axfood’s entire internal and external supply chain. A Witron OnSite service team of more than 60 employees ensures consistently high system availability in multi-shift operation around the clock – 365 days a year.

Successful omnichannel project

Both companies can reflect positively on a jointly and successfully implemented project. Since early 2025, following a phased ramp-up, one of the most innovative logistics centres in the retail industry has been operating at full capacity in Bålsta, around 40 kilometers northwest of Stockholm. Axfood and Witron designed and realized a cutting-edge omnichannel distribution centre that supplies stores as well as end customers via click + collect and home delivery. The highly automated system handles a product range of 22,000+ dry, fresh, and frozen items.

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Mainova Consolidates Spare Parts in new DC https://logisticsbusiness.com/warehousing/mainova-consolidates-spare-parts-in-new-dc/ Thu, 12 Mar 2026 08:30:05 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=66039 With the construction of a new Regional Warehouse in Frankfurt’s East, German utility supplier Mainova AG is consolidating its previously decentralised spare parts logistics at a single location. The goal is to increase the availability of spare parts for the technical infrastructure while simplifying logistics processes. Jungheinrich is implementing a new Regional Warehouse East for […]

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With the construction of a new Regional Warehouse in Frankfurt’s East, German utility supplier Mainova AG is consolidating its previously decentralised spare parts logistics at a single location. The goal is to increase the availability of spare parts for the technical infrastructure while simplifying logistics processes.

Jungheinrich is implementing a new Regional Warehouse East for Mainova in Frankfurt-am-Main to supply spare parts for the company’s technical infrastructure. The central element of the new warehouse solution for the energy supplier – who supplies more than one million people with electricity, gas, heat and water – is a narrow-aisle warehouse with around 6,200 pallet storage spaces and a rack height of up to 17.1 metres. Two Jungheinrich EKX 516 trilateral trucks will be used for storage and retrieval operations, enabling economical operation even at great lifting heights thanks to their high positioning accuracy and energy-efficient drive technology.

The pallet warehouse is complemented by a small parts warehouse with a storage height of 7.5 metres. A total of eleven Jungheinrich vertical lift modules ensure compact goods-to-person picking and short access times – a decisive factor for the rapid provision of spare parts when required, even with a high variety of items.

In addition, Mainova is integrating a wide-aisle warehouse into the new hall complex. Handling operations are carried out by an EFG 425k electric four-wheel counterbalance truck. In the ten-metre-high hall section, double-deep pallet racking is also installed and operated by the EFG using telescopic forks.
Cantilever racking for the storage of long goods is installed both in the new building and in a neighbouring existing hall. While the cantilever rack in the new building is also served by the EFG 425k, Jungheinrich, acting as general contractor, is supplying a specialist vehicle from Hubtex for handling the cantilever racks in the existing hall, thus also integrating this area seamlessly into the overall concept.

A separate hazardous materials storage area with manually operated shelving is also being set up in the new hall, where materials such as oils and paints will be stored. In total, three newly interconnected hall sections with heights of 25, 10 and 5 metres, along with an additional existing hall, are being equipped with warehouse technology. The hall sections are designed to ensure continuous material flow without structural interruptions.

“With the new regional warehouse, we are significantly increasing the efficiency and supply reliability of our spare parts logistics while making optimal use of the existing property,” says Leonid Feldman, Project Manager and Civil Engineer/Architect at Mainova AG.

“The solution by Jungheinrich maps our very diverse storage requirements – from small parts to long goods – within a single integrated system, creating the basis for fast and reliable processes,” adds Sascha Kaden, Head of Warehouse Management and future user of the facility.

The contract was awarded following an EU-wide tender procedure in which Jungheinrich emerged as the best bidder based on objective award criteria, building on the successful cooperation between the two companies in recent years. Jungheinrich had already implemented two smaller warehouse projects for Mainova in 2022, demonstrating its expertise as a system provider. The new regional warehouse is scheduled to go live in March 2027.

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High-performance Warehouse Automation https://logisticsbusiness.com/magazine-features/high-performance-warehouse-automation/ Wed, 11 Mar 2026 10:08:33 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=66033 Jumbo, the second-largest food retailer in the Netherlands, has been operating a highly automated fresh logistics centre that sets the pace for the entire supply chain without taking the lead role. At its National Distribution Centre in Nieuwegein, Jumbo and WITRON unveil a concept that redefines the role of modern logistics hubs. The focus: speed, […]

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Jumbo, the second-largest food retailer in the Netherlands, has been operating a highly automated fresh logistics centre that sets the pace for the entire supply chain without taking the lead role.

At its National Distribution Centre in Nieuwegein, Jumbo and WITRON unveil a concept that redefines the role of modern logistics hubs. The focus: speed, availability, and agility. Covering 40,000 square meters, the facility supplies over 725 stores in the Netherlands and Belgium with nearly 3,000 different fresh and ultra-fresh items, including dairy products, a wide selection of cheese, meat products, tapas, salads, chilled beverages, and much more. At an ambient temperature of +2 degrees Celsius, more than one million units can be picked daily using OPM (30 COM machines), AIO, and CPS modules. A fully automated shipping buffer ensures just-in-time dispatch of store-friendly stacked roll containers to the markets.

The fresh distribution centre marks the second successful collaboration between Jumbo and WITRON, following a high-performance dry goods facility. Equipped with OPM (31 COM machines), DPS, and CPS, this site can pick up to 565,000 cases on a peak day from a range of 14,300 items.

DC Heart of Supply Chain

The Dutch retail group faced a series of challenges that necessitated the construction of one of Europe’s most ambitious logistics platforms. These challenges included expected labour shortages in the future, expanding assortments in both the dry and fresh food sectors, rising consumer expectations – especially for fresh products – and growing demand for speed in both stores and online channels. Today, the highly automated fresh logistics centre in Nieuwegein, designed and implemented by WITRON as a lifetime partner, serves as the strategic centrepiece of a supply chain that is seamlessly orchestrated, adaptive, and more customer-focused than ever before. Because the consumer is the true pacesetter.

Mechanics and IT

The central distribution centre for fresh products (CDC) is designed for a daily peak capacity of 1.06 million picking units. A modular expansion for future growth has already been considered in the overall concept. All logistics areas are connected by a conveyor network that includes more than 670,000 pallet, tray, and tote storage locations, as well as 120 stacker cranes. Everything is controlled by a highly functional WITRON warehouse management system. All IT and mechanical components have been designed, manufactured, and put into operation by WITRON.

Labour, Range, Freshness

When Jumbo began shaping the future of its supply chain a few years ago, it became clear that existing structures could not meet the challenges ahead. “We expected to face challenges in the labour market, anticipated a growing number of SKUs, and set out to fundamentally redesign our fresh logistics with a clear focus on maximum customer service, freshness and sustainability,” recalls Karel de Jong, Supply Chain Director at Jumbo. The company aimed to broaden its SKU portfolio, sharpen assortment differentiation, and drive greater agility across its fresh logistics operations. At the same time, regional warehouse space became increasingly constrained as the product range continued to expand. The solution developed focused on centralizing, automating, and streamlining processes.

Precise time management is of critical importance, especially in the ultra-fresh segment. Temperature, daily operations, and weather conditions immediately impact volume.

“For us, agility means being able to respond very quickly to changing demands. A shift in weather means a shift in demand, and we need to be ready to respond,” says de Jong. “Freshness must reach the consumer’s table without delay – and not remain in the warehouse.”

The project marked a significant shift in WITRON’s internal approach. The warehouse has evolved from a standalone entity into a seamlessly integrated organ within the supply chain orchestra. Johannes Meissner, WITRON’s Technical Managing Director describes the development as follows: “The DC is no longer an isolated system, but an integral part of our customer’s organism. Only then can supply chains truly be optimized.” This transformation turns the warehouse from a pure consolidation and buffering point into a key control instrument. de Jong adds: “However, the DC does not lead the orchestra. The customer does.” Symbolically, he portrays the warehouse as the ‘first violin’ in a finely tuned supply chain orchestra – vital, leading, and setting the tone, but always part of a greater harmony.

Technology in XXL

The Nieuwegein logistics hub, featuring both dry goods and fresh food distribution centres, ranks among WITRON’s largest projects worldwide. It is equipped with more than 60 COM machines, over 1.1 million pallet, tray, and tote storage locations, approximately 200 stacker cranes, and is designed for a maximum capacity of 1.6 million picks per day. With OPM, AIO, CPS, and the automated shipping buffer, the Upper Palatinate team leverages proven technology. It guarantees peak availability, since the DC is the core of supply for Jumbo customers in the Netherlands and Belgium. An onsite service team ensures seamless operation of all IT and mechanical processes.

Both partners emphasize that success is not a matter of machine count, but of the specific requirements within each area of use. How can the system be balanced? Since all items are delivered to the stores on roll containers, seamless coordination between the subsystems is crucial to achieve maximum consolidation and space utilization. According to de Jong: “Success is not about the next machine. It’s about a perfectly tuned overall concept, with a vital role for the operators and control room team.”

Result in the Store

Automation delivers measurable benefits for the stores:
• More SKUs – with an upward trend
• Automated stacking of goods onto roll containers, tailored to the store’s shelf layout
• Consolidation of cases (picked in OPM and CPS) with pieces and totes (picked in AIO)
• Highly efficient, route-optimized truck loading enabled by advanced optimization processes within the automated shipping buffer

As a result, shelves in the store are replenished more efficiently, faster, and with less handling effort. In addition: processes previously managed via direct delivery – such as fresh fish – are now consolidated via Nieuwegein. And thanks to advanced forecast and replenishment processes, Jumbo delivers exactly what the stores truly need. The outcome for customers is enhanced freshness, a perfectly tailored assortment, and faster availability.

Packaging is a Core Competence

Automated processes require standardization, and this is reflected in the way various types of packaging are managed. “That’s why we have trained colleagues who have developed extensive expertise in this area,” says de Jong. Carton design, adhesive properties, stretch film, as well as cardboard and pallet quality are critical for material flow and load stability. WITRON and Jumbo took early action to identify critical packaging and deliver transparency to suppliers. The outcome is enhanced inbound control, resulting in more stable processes within the DC.

Employees at Jumbo were able to adapt effectively to their new tasks, moving from manual operations to an automated production process. Employees were able to gain detailed insights into future tasks within operated systems and engage in extensive exchanges with experienced users. “With a wealth of experience from projects implemented across Europe, North America, and Australia, we can offer customers comprehensive support in this vital field of change management,” emphasizes Meissner.

Technology can be purchased – culture cannot. Jumbo adopted lean principles with the Jumbo Production System (JPS), including shopfloor transparency, shift stand-ups, and a high degree of autonomous problem-solving by employees. Once a day, a central control meeting is held at the very centre of operations – not in an office, but in the work area. “Here, the colleagues analyse the previous day and review the tasks and goals for the upcoming shift. If this half hour goes well, it will be a good day,” says de Jong with a smile.

What measures can be expected next? Jumbo considers the supply chain to be an end-to-end network structure rather than a set of separate warehouses. Integrating stores, connecting with suppliers, optimizing transport routes, and automating processes – including in e-commerce, which is still handled manually today – are key pillars of the future strategy.

“Automation is not a standalone objective, but a tool applied where needed. Variety in our product range continues to define our corporate philosophy – driven by a clear focus on efficiency and economic viability,” states de Jong. Meissner gets straight to the point: “Automation built the foundation. The next chapter is all about end-to-end optimization.”

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AI-based Simulator to Optimise Inventory https://logisticsbusiness.com/it-in-logistics/ai/ai-based-simulator-to-optimise-inventory/ Tue, 10 Mar 2026 09:00:14 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=66000 The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Center for Transportation & Logistics and Mecalux have developed an artificial intelligence-based simulator capable of optimising inventory distribution across different warehouses within the same logistics network. The platform, called Genetic Evaluation & Simulation for Inventory Strategy (GENESIS), uses advanced machine learning models to analyse thousands of possible scenarios and […]

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The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Center for Transportation & Logistics and Mecalux have developed an artificial intelligence-based simulator capable of optimising inventory distribution across different warehouses within the same logistics network. The platform, called Genetic Evaluation & Simulation for Inventory Strategy (GENESIS), uses advanced machine learning models to analyse thousands of possible scenarios and determine the optimal stock level at each warehouse and when replenishment should occur.

The AI-based simulator takes into account variables such as forecast demand in each region, transport costs and the operational capacity of each warehouse to test various inventory replenishment policies without affecting real-world operations. “The genetic algorithm enables multiple simulations to be run using different parameters until the most efficient logistics strategy is identified. Companies can compare scenarios and select the one that best fits their operations,” says Dr. Matthias Winkenbach, Director of Research at the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics and the Intelligent Logistics Systems Lab.

Once data and variables are entered into the system, GENESIS generates the optimal solution along with advanced statistical dashboards. Users can analyse indicators such as consumption patterns, regions with high demand variability, SKUs with a greater risk of stockouts or warehouses experiencing supply issues.

Redistribute before purchasing

One of the system’s key features is its ability to rebalance inventory across warehouses. Instead of automatically placing new orders with suppliers, the tool analyses whether it is more efficient to transfer products from another facility within the network where excess inventory is available. In this way, companies can reduce costs and make better use of existing stock.

The system also recommends how to organise transport. For example, it suggests whether shipments should be consolidated to optimise truckloads or whether specific orders should be fulfilled from a particular location to reduce delivery times and costs.

“The real challenge wasn’t finding the right algorithm — it was making it fast enough to be practical. We developed GENESIS from the ground up to evaluate thousands of scenarios simultaneously rather than sequentially. What used to take days now takes minutes, which means companies can use it for real tactical planning, not just theoretical analysis,” says Rodrigo Hermosilla, Research Engineer at the MIT Intelligent Logistics Systems Lab.

Unlike analytical solutions reserved for specialised users, GENESIS is designed for both technical teams and business decision-makers. “The goal is to help companies minimise the total cost of their logistics network while ensuring the highest service level,” says Javier Carrillo, CEO of Mecalux.

Upcoming AI applications

The AI-powered simulator is one of the first tangible results of the joint initiative between Mecalux and MIT CTL. The collaboration is now entering a new phase focused on expanding the application of AI to other logistics processes, such as internal replenishment, digital twins in high-density automated storage systems, and slotting optimisation.

The MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics (MIT CTL) is a world leader in supply chain management research and education, with over 50 years of expertise. The centre’s work spans industry partnerships, cutting-edge research and driving supply chain innovation into practice through three pillars: research, outreach and education

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New Madrid Warehouse Multiplies Capacity https://logisticsbusiness.com/warehousing/storage-racking/new-madrid-warehouse-multiplies-capacity/ Mon, 09 Mar 2026 09:13:23 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=65969 Retail de Impacto, the parent company of the SQRUPS chain, has strengthened its operations with the launch of a new 9,120 m² warehouse in Madrid, fully equipped with AR Racking solutions. In a sector like retail, where product turnover and service agility are decisive, having a robust, reliable, and tailored storage system makes all the […]

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Retail de Impacto, the parent company of the SQRUPS chain, has strengthened its operations with the launch of a new 9,120 m² warehouse in Madrid, fully equipped with AR Racking solutions. In a sector like retail, where product turnover and service agility are decisive, having a robust, reliable, and tailored storage system makes all the difference.

Executed in just six weeks from supply to installation, the project consisted of a conventional pallet racking system (AR PAL) that accommodates up to 10,844 Euro pallets on structures over 10 metres high. This proven solution combines simplicity and efficiency for high-turnover logistics — key for a company like SQRUPS, which distributes a wide range of food and household goods at competitive prices.

The growth of our store network demands logistics that are increasingly robust and flexible. With this new centre and our collaboration with AR Racking, we are taking a key step to ensure availability and agility in our service

says José María Toro, he project lead at Retail de Impacto.

Located inside the warehouse building, the installation has been designed to optimise available space and facilitate both stock management and order preparation. The solution installed by AR Racking not only meets the company’s current requirements but also leaves room for future expansions should SQRUPS’s pace of growth require it.

“We have implemented a reliable, scalable solution with tight execution times that will enable SQRUPS to continue expanding with full logistics assurance,” notes Alfonso Peña, AR Racking’s Sales Representative for the central region.

This new project consolidates AR Racking’s position as a partner in the retail sector, delivering storage solutions that integrate seamlessly into high-demand, high-performance logistics operations.

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Global Leadership for Toyota Automated Logistics https://logisticsbusiness.com/materials-handling/global-leadership-for-toyota-automated-logistics/ Fri, 06 Mar 2026 10:06:18 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=65890 Toyota Industries Corporation today announced the appointment of three industry leaders as CEOs of Toyota Automated Logistics (TAL), its new warehouse automation business. Hitoshi Matsuoka will serve as TAL’s CEO, Central. Thomas Hibinger will serve as TAL’s CEO for the EMEA and APAC regions, and Aaron M. Jones will serve as TAL’s CEO, Americas. Debuting […]

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Toyota Industries Corporation today announced the appointment of three industry leaders as CEOs of Toyota Automated Logistics (TAL), its new warehouse automation business. Hitoshi Matsuoka will serve as TAL’s CEO, Central. Thomas Hibinger will serve as TAL’s CEO for the EMEA and APAC regions, and Aaron M. Jones will serve as TAL’s CEO, Americas.

Debuting at LogiMAT Stuttgart, March 23–25th, TAL unites the combined strengths of Bastian Solutions, Vanderlande’s Warehousing business, and viastore under one brand formally launching on April 1, 2026. This powerful combination enables the delivery of scalable systems, intelligent software, and comprehensive lifecycle services – all with the quality and reliability associated with the Toyota brand.

“Thomas Hibinger and Aaron Jones have a solid track record of strong performance leading two of our warehouse automation businesses. Their vision has shaped the future of automated warehousing and guided the delivery of innovative and pragmatic solutions to solve customers’ complex and shifting logistics challenges,” said Hitoshi Matsuoka, Central CEO, TAL. “Their appointments as regional CEOs reflect TICO’s commitment to build on the collective depth and breadth of our world-class technologies, software and services while delivering a seamless customer experience across regions.”

“I look forward to this new chapter, allowing TAL to bring automated logistics to the next level by combining our global strength and expertise under one roof,” states Thomas Hibinger, CEO, EMEA and APAC. “Warehouse and fulfillment operations never stop, nor are they constrained by time zones or geography. With this unification, we aim to deliver greater scalability, innovation and long-term value for our customers worldwide.”

The fast-growing market for warehouse automation is spurred by greater demand for next- or same-day deliveries, ever-faster throughput, absolute order accuracy and optimal warehouse performance. Through seamless integration across the automation landscape, TAL addresses these needs end to end. This approach supports organizations at every stage of their automation journey, whether taking the first steps to automate manual processes in legacy warehouses or refining the advanced distribution centres relied on by the largest e-commerce platforms and the global fulfillment operations of leading brands.

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The Digital Twin: Beyond Simulation https://logisticsbusiness.com/magazine-features/the-digital-twin-beyond-simulation/ Fri, 27 Feb 2026 16:19:17 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=65743 Peter MacLeod spoke to Ocado’s Andy Ingram-Tedd to hear how cutting-edge live digital twins remove the guesswork from warehouse operations. Ocado Intelligent Automation (OIA) has never been shy about scale. But in my conversation with Andy Ingram-Tedd, VP of Advanced Technology, he makes the point that scale is not the story. The story is what […]

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Peter MacLeod spoke to Ocado’s Andy Ingram-Tedd to hear how cutting-edge live digital twins remove the guesswork from warehouse operations.

Ocado Intelligent Automation (OIA) has never been shy about scale. But in my conversation with Andy Ingram-Tedd, VP of Advanced Technology, he makes the point that scale is not the story. The story is what you do with it. After nearly 25 years at Ocado, he has watched the company grow from a tight early team to a global organisation with thousands of people, and he is still struck by the same internal energy that drove the first deliveries.

“It just never slows down,” he says. “There’s always something happening, there’s always some new adventure, there’s always some new mission.”

That tempo matters because it shapes how OIA, the Ocado Group division that takes its technology to customers worldwide, thinks about automation deployment. Ingram-Tedd is candid about a familiar misconception: that robotics is simply the substitution of people with machines. His view is that a more accurate way to see it is as systems design, and the interplay between humans, software and hardware.
“A lot of people always ask me, you’re developing robots, you’re putting people out of business,” he says. “But we’ve got more people that we employ today than we ever had. We are doing more, and we’re becoming more efficient.”

Simulation, he adds, is the discipline that forces you to treat that interaction seriously.

Simulation vs. Digital Twins

If there is one thread Ingram-Tedd wants readers to take away, it is the distinction between simulation and digital twins, and why the two are often muddled. Simulation, in his definition, is a predictive model used before something exists in the physical world. A digital twin only becomes a digital twin once the warehouse is built and operating, because it is continuously aligned to reality using actual operational data.

Simulation is what you reach for when spreadsheets fail. Basic processes can be approximated with time and motion assumptions. But once you seek high throughput and high utilisation across many moving parts, you need discrete event simulation, modelling countless activities with start points, end points, process times and rules.

“We really do mean a discrete event simulation,” he says. “There are lots of things happening. They have a start point, they have an end point. You can’t just calculate that on a spreadsheet.”

Ocado’s own definitions are straightforward. Simulation is used before a system is built. You load assumptions, including orders, stock, layout, speeds and rules, then you run what-if scenarios to see outcomes and risks. The questions are practical: will this design work, what size should it be, where are the weak points. A digital twin, by contrast, is a digital representation of a real physical system that stays aligned to the live operation using operational data. Its value is decision support during operation, including testing changes safely and understanding what happens if you change something today or tomorrow.

Removing Guess-Work

Ingram-Tedd emphasises that simulation should not be about your best day. It should be about your worst day. That might mean modelling downtime, late inbound vehicles, or labour gaps, either individually or in combination. “We are operators of our own equipment,” he tells me. “We are not guessing. We know what the bad things can happen. They’ve happened to us in the last 25 years!”
Once a site is live, the inputs are no longer assumptions. They are measurements. You can take data from the real warehouse, feed it into the model, and test configuration changes, from item placement strategies to outload timing, pick speeds and resource utilisation. The goal is continuous improvement, driven by evidence rather than instinct.

I ask why does OIA build its own simulation tools. Ingram-Tedd argues that third-party packages are useful, but insufficient for modelling the complexity of Ocado’s grid-based system, where software determines where and when to store, retrieve and sequence stock, while bots navigate above dense storage. “We don’t use a third party and there’s a really important reason for that,” he says. “There isn’t an off-the-shelf simulation package that can do that.”

Ocado has developed its own simulation capability in-house since 2008. A key point, in his telling, is that the software powering simulation is identical to the software that powers the production site. That tighter link between model and reality, he says, supports better design decisions and more confidence before capital is committed.

Just as importantly, simulation is end to end. It does not stop at bot movement. It extends to conveyors, pallets, vehicles, people and robotic pick, because optimisation only makes sense at the level of the whole ecosystem.

“True optimisation only happens when you put all the subsystems and you model them all together,” he says. “Integration brings complexity, and simulation helps you understand the knock-on effect of every design choice.”

Infrastructural Optimisation

The practical value is that simulation turns design questions into testable scenarios. One slide example is the relationship between bot numbers and achievable throughput. Run a range of cases in parallel and you can plot where diminishing returns begin, identifying a sweet spot beyond which additional investment yields little benefit.

That same approach applies to pick stations. OIA’s stations are modular, and simulation can explore how layout changes affect both throughput and the way an operator performs. The aim is to avoid paying for human time while allowing the station to underfeed the operator with work.

In one demonstration clip discussed in the interview, Ingram-Tedd references a picking performance figure that he knows will sound implausible to many readers: 1,072 units per hour on a station. He is quick to caveat that it is not a sustained operating promise. Building a system around peak human performance risks waste if people cannot maintain it, and drives unnecessary investment in upstream resources. A more sensible operating target might be 600 to 700 units per hour, he suggests, still well beyond common industry expectations.

What often breaks automation is not the average case, but the exception: odd products, awkward presentations, or rare failure modes that still occur frequently at high volume. In robotics and automation engineering these are known as corner cases, unusual or extreme situations outside normal operating conditions that must still be handled safely and reliably. “You can’t have robots like this in a live site unless they can do corner cases,” believes Ingram-Tedd.

Future Looks Bright

Beyond grocery, OIA is applying its platform to other verticals. Ingram-Tedd highlights a major project with McKesson in Canada – not yet live at the time of the interview, but not far off – which he describes as a large system in Montreal designed to raise productivity while improving traceability, accountability and security. He argues that pharma distribution shares many traits with grocery, but with stricter compliance requirements, particularly around batch and lot traceability. He hints at significant productivity gains, while noting there are customer-specific adaptations that remain confidential.

He also brought to my attention that mutual exclusivity has ended in the majority of markets where Ocado operates its grocery technology with partners, opening the door for Ocado to bring its evolved product back to some of the world’s most developed e-commerce markets after a period of exclusivity agreements.

Towards the end of the interview, Ingram-Tedd briefly referenced a new picking technology planned for introduction in 2026, which he characterises as a significant step-change. Logistics Business was given an early look at the concept, but details remain under wraps ahead of public launch at MODEX in the Spring. We hope to return to this in a future edition, once OIA is ready to speak about it in full.

For now, his message is consistent. Whether the question is how many bots to deploy, how to design a pick station, or how to integrate the next wave of automation, the differentiator is not a single robot. It is the capability to model complex systems accurately, learn from real operations, and keep improving.

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Decades of Storage Expertise at LogiMAT https://logisticsbusiness.com/warehousing/storage-racking/decades-of-storage-expertise-at-logimat/ Fri, 27 Feb 2026 09:25:20 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=65731 stow, a global supplier of industrial storage solutions representing the racking division of the stow Group, announces its participation in LogiMAT 2026. Taking place from March 24 to 26th at Messe Stuttgart, the event will see stow presenting its full range of racking, shelving, and semi-automated solutions at Hall 3, Booth 3B77. The company will […]

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stow, a global supplier of industrial storage solutions representing the racking division of the stow Group, announces its participation in LogiMAT 2026. Taking place from March 24 to 26th at Messe Stuttgart, the event will see stow presenting its full range of racking, shelving, and semi-automated solutions at Hall 3, Booth 3B77. The company will be exhibiting alongside Movu Robotics, member of the stow Group, highlighting the Group’s position as a comprehensive provider from static to fully automated warehouse solutions.

As the demand for efficient warehouse space optimization continues to rise, stow aims to demonstrate why it remains an established and trusted partner for businesses seeking to maximize storage density and operational performance.

Comprehensive Racking Portfolio

The stow pallet racking portfolio provides a comprehensive suite of high-density storage solutions designed to maximize warehouse efficiency and optimize space utilization. Featuring conventional pallet racking, drive-in racking, pallet live storage, high-bay racking, and silo systems, these systems are engineered for flexibility, scalability, and durability.

Whether storing standard pallets, bulky goods, perishable products, or high-value items, racking systems allow warehouses to increase storage density without compromising accessibility or operational safety. With over 45 years of experience and thousands of successful installations worldwide, stow can deliver cutting-edge, trusted storage solutions for modern warehouses.

Semi-Automation Portfolio

stow‘s semi-automation solutions are engineered for businesses that demand performance, flexibility, and scalability without fully committing to full automation. These solutions offer a smart middle ground: significantly improving operational efficiency and warehouse capacity while keeping systems intuitive and adaptable.

In a rapidly changing market, solutions help businesses stay agile, compliant, and ready for the future. These solutions allow businesses to optimize space, lower energy and labor costs, and improve inventory control.

The semi-automated product range of stow features two distinct, high-performance pallet systems designed to optimize storage density and operational speed: the versatile stow Mobile system and the newly upgraded stow Atlas® 4.0, both equipped for ambient, chilled and frozen storage environments.

A key highlight of the exhibition will be the presentation of the latest stow Atlas 4.0. This next-generation pallet shuttle system is designed for high-density storage and features enhanced operational efficiency, superior serviceability, and connectivity options that prepare warehouses for future demands. Operating on a LIFO basis, this autonomous shuttle transports pallets within racking channels, significantly reducing forklift traffic and personnel costs.

This updated version delivers tangible advantages that make a real difference to daily operations: higher operational uptime, lower repair costs, and consistent performance due to reliable engineering.

Racking & Automation Offering

Philip Mylle, CSO of stow Group, emphasized the company’s enduring legacy and forward-looking approach: “stow has been a trusted, valued partner for nearly 50 years already. We are the largest in Europe, but still innovating every year, either in our products, such as the renewed stow Atlas 4.0, or in technologies that grow further alongside us, like Movu Robotics for warehouse automation.”

Visitors to the booth will experience stow’s diverse portfolio, including the newly enhanced stow Atlas® 4.0 pallet shuttle system. The joint presence with Movu Robotics underscores the Group’s ability to support customers at every stage of their growth, from manual operations to fully automated facilities.

“stow Group acts as a one-stop shop for all shelving, racking, semi-automated, and fully automated warehouses with Movu Robotics,” said Jos De Vuyst, CEO of stow Group. “We are continuously expanding, now also with a footprint in the United States in Adairsville, Georgia, where we are building a new 240,000 sq feet racking production site, planned to be operational as of April 2026. The launch of our new factory in the USA also enables us to extend the same exceptional service and dedication to our European customers operating in the United States.”

The exhibition will serve as a platform for stow to connect with logistics professionals, demonstrating how its locally manufactured, high-quality systems can solve complex storage challenges. From standard pallet racking to sophisticated semi-automated systems, stow provides scalable solutions tailored to the evolving needs of the global supply chain.

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Retirement After 25 years at BITO Storage https://logisticsbusiness.com/warehousing/storage-racking/retirement-after-25-years-at-bito-storage/ Thu, 26 Feb 2026 08:47:00 +0000 https://logisticsbusiness.com/?p=65674 Edward Hutchison, Managing Director of BITO Storage Systems UK, has announced his retirement, effective at the end of February. Hutchison has led BITO Storage Systems since 1 January 2001. During his 25-year tenure, the company has grown into one of the UK’s leading providers of innovative storage and intralogistics solutions. As one of the few […]

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Edward Hutchison, Managing Director of BITO Storage Systems UK, has announced his retirement, effective at the end of February.

Hutchison has led BITO Storage Systems since 1 January 2001. During his 25-year tenure, the company has grown into one of the UK’s leading providers of innovative storage and intralogistics solutions. As one of the few single-source suppliers in the sector, BITO offers racking, shelving, bins and containers, as well as picking and transportation systems for customers across a wide range of industries.

BITO Storage Systems is the UK subsidiary of BITO-Lagertechnik Bittmann GmbH, the internationally operating manufacturer of storage and order-picking systems. With more than 70,000 customers worldwide, the BITO Group is among Europe’s leaders in its field. Headquartered in Meisenheim, Germany, the family-owned company has been in existence for over 180 years and is guided by strong core values of quality, service and long-term partnership, placing people at the centre of its business philosophy.

BITO established its UK subsidiary in 1999. Following his arrival in January 2001, Hutchison built the business from the ground up, creating a robust and sustainable operating model. This included enabling customers to order via catalogue or online and supplying storage solutions to logistics operations across all UK sectors. Under his leadership, the business achieved consistent growth, recording its highest ever UK sales turnover in 2024 and establishing BITO as a recognised name for innovative storage technology.

In 2016, Hutchison oversaw the company’s relocation to its purpose-built headquarters at Helmsdale Business Park in Nuneaton. The modern facility includes a showroom, experience centre and distribution hub, housing a comprehensive range of intralogistics solutions such as pallet racking and ‘Carton Live’, alongside a wide selection of fast-moving stock items including shelving, bins and containers. The site also provides a high-tech, modern workplace and offers customers the opportunity to experience and test solutions first-hand.

Edward Hutchison commented:

“It has been an incredible 25 years, and I am extremely proud of everything the BITO team has achieved during my time with the company. I would like to thank my colleagues in Nuneaton and the BITO Group management in Germany for their continued support, as well as our suppliers, partners and customers with whom we have delivered many outstanding storage and picking projects over the years. As I approach my 67th birthday, and after more than 50 years in work, I am grateful to be in good health and very much looking forward to the next chapter of my life with my wife and family.”


Winfried Schmuck, CEO of BITO-Lagertechnik Bittmann GmbH, said:

“On behalf of the entire BITO Group, I would like to sincerely thank Edward for his outstanding leadership and significant contribution over the past 25 years. He has built a highly capable and committed team in Nuneaton and has consistently driven growth in the UK business. We are deeply grateful for his dedication and the lasting impact he has had on BITO’s values, vision and long-term success. We wish Edward all the very best and a thoroughly enjoyable retirement.”

The BITO Group has already secured a successor for the UK Managing Director role and looks forward to sharing further details shortly.

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