According to Scott Kirchner of Innovation Economy, CasePick Systems is a company who is, like Kiva Systems, revolutionizing warehouse operations with robots. The company was acquired by C&S Wholesale Grocers, a privately held New Hampshire company. Here's what Scott had to say:
Symbotic’s proposition is that bots are not only more efficient but that companies that purchase its technology can store more product in less space.
Jim Baum, the CEO, did not want me to shoot video of the bots in action - “We’re still slightly paranoid,’’ he said - but I did get to see them moving merchandise around a test track. The bots followed white tape on the floor and used finger-like rods that extend horizontally to pull boxes off of a shelf. They communicated wirelessly with a computer that told them where to pick up and drop off the items and ensured that they would avoid collisions. They can also ride elevators.
The robots are built primarily from locally sourced components, Baum said, and are assembled in Wilmington.
How is Symbotic different from Kiva Systems, the better-known warehouse robotics company in North Reading?
Kiva’s bots help to fill boxes; Symbotic’s bots build pallets stacked with boxes. Kiva’s short, squat bots typically move big racks of open boxes to an order-picker who removes individual items and then packs them.
One example would be filling a box with three pairs of shoes for a Zappos.com order. Symbotic, on the other hand, builds short, squat bots that grab closed boxes and bring them to another robot that puts them onto pallets to be trucked to a store.
Baum said the company will probably double in size this year, to 200 employees.
But I didn’t get a chance to see the bots in action until last month, at the company’s Wilmington headquarters. Baum wanted to talk about the company’s new name, Symbotic, and its hiring spree. He had just returned from Newburgh, N.Y., where Symbotic’s first production system is deployed at a C&S warehouse. The warehouse assembles cases on wooden pallets, which are then trucked to Stop & Shop stores in New York. The system consists of 168 bots that move boxes at up to 25 miles per hour.
Symbotic’s proposition is that bots are not only more efficient but that companies that purchase its technology can store more product in less space.
Baum did not want me to shoot video of the bots in action - “We’re still slightly paranoid,’’ he said - but I did get to see them moving merchandise around a test track. The bots followed white tape on the floor and used finger-like rods that extend horizontally to pull boxes off of a shelf. They communicated wirelessly with a computer that told them where to pick up and drop off the items and ensured that they would avoid collisions. They can also ride elevators.
The robots are built primarily from locally sourced components, Baum said, and are assembled in Wilmington.
How is Symbotic different from Kiva Systems, the better-known warehouse robotics company in North Reading?
Kiva’s bots help to fill boxes; Symbotic’s bots build pallets stacked with boxes. Kiva’s short, squat bots typically move big racks of open boxes to an order-picker who removes individual items and then packs them.
One example would be filling a box with three pairs of shoes for a Zappos.com order. Symbotic, on the other hand, builds short, squat bots that grab closed boxes and bring them to another robot that puts them onto pallets to be trucked to a store.
Baum said the company will probably double in size this year, to 200 employees.
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