AS/RS Means More Yogurt To Go Around

YORK, Pa. — FAGE USA’s yogurt manufacturing venture in the USA has been a great success, so much so they are already expanding the facility. Back in early 2008, FAGE USA opened their new manufacturing plant and attached distribution center in Johnstown, NY. The original facility includes a Westfalia High Density Automated Storage and Retrieval System (AS/RS) and Savanna.

YORK, Pa. — FAGE USA’s yogurt manufacturing venture in the USA has been a great success, so much so they are already expanding the facility. Back in early 2008, FAGE USA opened their new manufacturing plant and attached distribution center in Johnstown, NY. The original facility includes a Westfalia High Density Automated Storage and Retrieval System (AS/RS) and Savanna.NET® Warehouse Management Software for handling, buffering, and order picking of various yogurt products as they emerge from production area cooling tunnels into the 40° F warehouse.

FAGE (pronounced fah-yeh), based in Athens, Greece, has taken the dairy world by storm with it’s all natural, premium yogurt. The FAGE Total Yogurt is the No. 1 seller in Greece and has won food tasting accolades around the world. After much success in Europe, the company is expanding again in the US market — its 28th country.

Additional growth necessitates expanding into a new building for both the manufacturing capacity of the plant and the storage capacity of the distribution center. The existing Westfalia Storage/ Retrieval Machine (SRM) now handles both the existing and an expanded distribution center by extending the SRM aisle. Fage’s expansion includes increasing the SRM aisle length, adding more gravity flow pick lanes and rack, as well as increasing the storage lanes depth above the first level pick area.
 
The Westfalia Satellite rack entry vehicle’s ability to store pallets up to 12 deep in a single lane allows for FAGE’s expansion without the need for an additional SRM. FAGE is able to expand the rack lane depths up to 11 deep on levels two and up above the pick area in the expansion area. Thus another 504 storage locations have been added over and above the 1,960 locations from the aisle extension, providing 26 percent more storage in the same building cubic expansion.

The building cube space in the expansion area above these new additional picking lanes would have gone to waste if it were not for Westfalia’s ability to program the Satellite to extend into deeper rack lanes. Without this capability, Fage would have needed a building 25 percent larger to accommodate the additional storage Westfalia’s solution provides. Overall, the total storage increase for the expansion is 2,464 locations, a 151 percent increase for the existing system.

Westfalia’s expansion solution began at the initial design conception. Fage’s shipping docks are positioned alongside the AS/RS, not at the end of the system. They pick products for filling orders from 5-deep gravity flow lanes fed by the SRM. Yogurt products are picked from these gravity flow lanes onto pallet jack vehicles using RF picking instructions. The full picking process is controlled by Westfalia’s Savanna.NET® Warehouse Management Software.

In case of further expansion, Westfalia plans to add more aisle length, more I/O conveyors, plus another SRM which can operate in the same aisle as the existing SRM. Two SRMs in one aisle is yet another key feature of Westfalia’s Automated Storage and Retrieval System designs.

Westfalia Technologies, Inc. provides  providing logistics software and material handling equipment for plants, warehouses and distribution centers. To learn more about Westfalia’s products, including Automated Storage and Retrieval Systems (AS/RS) and Savanna.NET® Warehouse Management Systems, visit www.WestfaliaUSA.com.

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