56 DC VELOCITY AUGUST 2016 www.dcvelocity.com
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A look at how DCs are using equipment and
services to rev up their operations
WALK INTO THE GLENMORE DISTILLERY’S NEW
$45 million distribution center in Owensboro, Ky.,
and you’ll find something not often found in a bottling
operation: a large-scale automated storage and retrieval
system (AS/RS). Although these machines are used in a
wide range of industries, they have yet to make major
inroads in this sector. Glenmore is one of the few spirits suppliers to use an AS/RS, according to Westfalia
Technologies, which provided the equipment.
The high-bay AS/RS at the
Owensboro facility occupies just over
60 percent of the 223,000-square-
foot DC. Together with Westfalia’s
Savanna.NET warehouse execution
system, it enables the operation to
store, retrieve, and manage pallets of
finished goods with high efficiency.
The system also has the capacity to
support further growth.
It’s a big change from Glenmore’s
previous distribution operation,
which relied on manual paper-based
processes, lacked a warehouse management system, and had only rudimentary software that was used strictly for location control.
“The automation provides the
needed efficiency, throughput potential, and expansion capability, as well as the [capacity]
to grow dynamically with the company,” says Craig
Cunningham, distribution manager at The Glenmore
Distillery.
Glenmore’s new AS/RS contains four storage aisles,
each equipped with a storage/retrieval machine (SRM).
Pallets are stored on seven levels. The two outside rows
hold pallets up to eight deep, while the middle rows hold
pallets up to 10 deep. Each SRM can induct/output 90
pallets of finished goods per hour.
Among other advantages, the equipment has all but
eliminated handling-related product breakage. “The AS/
RS has absolutely reduced warehouse-created damage,”
says Cunningham. “Since pallets are conveyed from the
moment they leave the palletizer equipment until they
are loaded on a truck, product is damage free from fork-
lifts and other incidental contact.”
The AS/RS also contains 52 pallet-staging lanes that
are capable of holding 416 pallets and an automated layer
picking system from Cimcorp. The
system can move 150 layers per hour
and stores 255 SKUs (stock-keeping
units).
“We want to provide flexible order-
ing solutions to our wholesalers, and
a large number of our orders are less-
than-pallet quantities,” Cunningham
notes. “Performing this work manual-
ly is time consuming and not cost-ef-
fective.”
In the new facility, this type of pick-
ing no longer has to be done by hand.
Nowadays, the Cimcorp system integrates with the Westfalia warehouse
system to handle just-in-time fulfillment for layer-quantity orders. “From
a software perspective, Cimcorp and
Westfalia have teamed up to provide
a solution that has minimal interaction required from a
warehouse operator, further improving system efficiency,” Cunningham says.
As for how it’s all working out, Cunningham says
the new facility is just now hitting its stride. “We’re
essentially four months into being fully operational in
the new warehouse. We have begun to see our original
expectations and visions for this system [fulfilled]. Now,
we have transformed into one of the most state-of-the-art warehouses in the country,” he says.
Automated equipment keeps the bottles flowing at The Glenmore Distillery’s Kentucky DC.
Raising their spirits