DB Schenker, one of the leading global logistics service providers, will be opening a new site in the Prague region next year. The highly automated fulfilment warehouse will expand the company’s logistics capacities and shortens delivery times. Along with retail operations, the new distribution centre will also manage B2C e-commerce activities, including an extensive value added services area addressing the demand for personalised products requested by consumers.
“DB Schenker has experienced outstanding success since its entry into the Eastern European market,” says Ingo Brauckmann, Executive Vice President Contract Logistics / SCM Europe at DB Schenker. “The new automated fulfilment centre, will enable us to expand our capacities and improve our performance, thereby setting the stage for further growth in the region. We are thus now ready to expand and improve the services we offer to our rapidly growing customer base.”
Efficient and innovative fulfilment has become more important as e-commerce logistics operations continue to expand and automation helps increase capacities and make the supply chain more resilient.
The new distribution centre will offer excellent service quality – made possible by a highly scalable, modular G-T-P (goods-to-person) system combined with an extensive conveyor system and a high-performance cross-belt sorter for shipping parcels that will be provided by DB Schenker’s partner Körber. Indeed, Körber’s software solution will control more than 100 autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) that will be part of the highly automated logistics ecosystem. The facility will thus feature one of the largest AMR deployments of its kind in Eastern Europe.
Despite the high automation level, the distribution centre will require more than 1,000 operators at peak times.
The centre, which will be located near Prague Airport and a major highway that runs to Germany, will enable very short delivery times to customers in Central and Eastern Europe.
The new DC is scheduled to begin operating in the summer of 2023. The current distribution centre, which is also located in the Prague region, cannot accommodate the future demands of the customer. The current site will not be closed but used for reverse logistics services to meet our customers’ circular economy needs and reduce their digital carbon footprint.
The post appeared first on Logistics Business® Magazine.