First AirRob Project in Europe Goes Live

The first AirRob automated warehouse storage system in Europe has become operational at CTPark Ostrava-Poruba in Czechia. The system, designed and manufactured by Libiao Robotics, was implemented by its local partner SLUNO at the premises of logistics services provider Geis Group.


Award-winning AirRob is a high-density, high-efficiency warehouse automation system that uses coordinated vertical-climbing pick robots and floorbots to deliver goods rapidly to workstations, without requiring major infrastructure changes. Designed for intensive logistics operations, AirRob significantly increases storage capacity and throughput while reducing labour and energy costs, setting a high benchmark for scalable goods-to-person automation.


Founded in Germany in 1945 and active in Czechia since 1991, Bad Neustadt-headquartered Geis Group offers a wide range of standard and customer-specific transport and logistics solutions. With a network of 182 depots in 14 countries, it manages over 1.8 million square metres of warehouse space. Family-owned Geis has experienced strong growth through its philosophy of continuous development, combining its experience and knowledge with current logistics trends, while retaining a sharp focus on consistent quality of service and adherence to environmental management.


Successful Pilot Project


Initially installed by Libiao partner SLUNO as a POC (Proof of Concept) project, the pilot proved so successful that it was soon commissioned into real customer operations. Situated in eastern Czechia on the D1 motorway, a major north/south European road corridor, CTPark Ostrava-Poruba is in an area where availability of labour is not so much of an issue as elsewhere in Europe and beyond. However, despite this, the POC demonstrated that in certain cases speed and accuracy of fulfilment and dense storage are just as important as labour challenges to justify investment in automated warehouse systems.

SLUNO has been developing cutting-edge IT for logistics and retail for 33 years and is considered to be a leading Central European player in the field of robotic solutions. Through AirRob, SLUNO provides Geis with automated tote storage, vertical movement on standard racking, and fast, precise handling in narrow (850mm) aisles. Libiao’s technology saves warehouse space and accelerates fulfilment speed, which is proving to be especially attractive to e-commerce customers shipping to demanding end consumers.

With the ability to pick hundreds of items per hour, AirRob already impressed Pavel Křížek, Director of Logistics at Geis, during an initial trial at a nearby facility in Skladon: “We realise that the capacity of logistics spaces is not inflatable, so we asked for a solution that can work independently even in extremely narrow aisles and at the same time can service racks up to eight meters high. Thanks to this, we can free up part of the capacity of our warehouses and we are not forced to immediately build additional buildings. AirRob has already helped us with this. The first days indicate that the robot is doing very well. It is accurate and fast.”


Petra Tylová, Director of the Distribution and Logistics Division at SLUNO, added:

Since we demonstrated the benefits of AirRob in Skladon at the end of last year, we have had a lot of demand. Bringing it to life is where the experience of Geis, which is synonymous with innovation, came into play. They are used to changing and reshaping things quickly when they see the potential for greater efficiency and gaining an edge over the competition. We see every day that as companies grow, they will eventually struggle with the limited capacity of their warehouses. And not everyone has additional land or millions to build new halls. Thanks to AirRob, we are able to optimise logistics in existing spaces by increasing capacity both in width and height, using the entire warehouse space up to the ceiling and at the same time narrowing the aisles to the necessary minimum.


Tried & Tested Solution


As the first and original system that uses rack-climbing robots paired with a fleet of its tried-and-tested ‘mini-yellow’ floorbots, AirRob is a flagship robotic solution. Easily installed between existing racks with minimal infrastructural modifications, AirRob places no increased demands on load capacity or floor surface, so is therefore ideal for retrofitting in warehouses where capacity and dimensions are becoming restricted. Installation causes minimal interruption to ongoing operations, and deployment is rapid.

Commenting on the Ostrava installation, Libiao’s Global Head of Sales Ronan Shen said:

Many customers around the world are already benefiting from the performance gains AirRob can bring them, so for us this first project in Europe is a significant milestone. We are already well-known here for our range of automated systems, and there are thousands of our mini-yellow floorbots operating night and day in warehouses and parcel hubs across all of Europe. But this project in Czechia demonstrates that at a time of labour shortages and rising per-square-metre warehouse costs, customers are looking for ways to optimise their existing space at a competitive investment level within their existing storage footprint.


Established in 2016, Libiao Robotics has grown to become one of the leading players in the global warehouse robotics sector, boasting household name customers across Asia, Europe, Australia and South America, and familiar U.S. brands such as Skechers, Procter & Gamble (P&G) and K-mart.

Lean Logistics Transformation for Packaging Firm

Volpak, a Coesia company and a global supplier of HFFS solutions for flexible packaging, has launched a major intralogistics transformation at its historic Barcelona site, integrating lean principles, automation and data-driven process redesign. The project was executed in just six months and represents one of the most significant logistics upgrades in the company’s history.


Sustaining growth through smarter logistics


In recent years, Volpak’s growth has accelerated, driven by the global success of flexible pouches — a format that fits the modern, fast-moving lifestyle and offers strong sustainability advantages. As demand and production volumes grew, so did the internal movement of parts and sub-assemblies, putting pressure on both space and workforce. The company faced a clear challenge: how to handle higher logistics complexity while maintaining flexibility, quality, and efficiency within the existing footprint.

From push to pull: a new logistics philosophy


Volpak’s answer was a complete shift from a ‘push’ to a ‘pull’ material-flow model, where every movement responds directly to production demand. The first milestone came two years ago with the introduction of autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) that deliver selected components from the warehouse to the assembly lines. The new phase brings full system integration: a fully automated warehouse synchronized with three AMR connected to the production floor and synchronized with three AMRs, ensuring seamless, just-in-time delivery of materials.


A compact factory, a complex challenge


Volpak’s Barcelona site is spread across two levels — a configuration that naturally limits traditional warehouse expansion. To overcome this, the new system leverages vertical conveyors, high-density storage, and multi-level transport routes, creating a continuous material flow across the plant. The resulting architecture introduces a multi-level material-flow system designed to maximize capacity and minimize travel time. Each component, from inbound goods to production orders, is tracked and routed automatically through intelligent conveyors and buffer zones, linking warehouse, inspection, and assembly areas with precision timing.


Data, segmentation, and efficiency


Before implementation, Volpak performed a complete analysis of its more than 40,000 Stock Keeping Units (SKUs) — unique codes used to identify each part or component stored in the facility, classifying them into A-B-C categories based on frequency and movement. The resulting setup now dedicates high-throughput areas to ‘A’ parts (representing 80% of movements) while lower-demand components are efficiently stored in deep racks. The new automated storage system provides over 50% additional storage capacity and scalability, allowing the company to absorb an expanded SKU portfolio. The integration of autonomous robots that handle boxes directly within the racking system ensures high throughput with minimal footprint.

An ecosystem built for Lean excellence


The project consolidates Volpak’s ‘Lean Transformation’ path, which has already improved assembly areas and introduced Just-in-Time principles across operations. With the new setup, material preparation follows a ‘one-piece flow’ logic: production orders are assembled and delivered as complete kits, minimizing waiting times and ensuring that every group has exactly the parts needed to start work. The result is a faster, cleaner, and more ergonomic process that reduces handling, improves safety, and enhances operator efficiency.


Benchmark for operational future


Entirely designed and managed by Volpak’s internal teams — with Coesia’s engineering and digital expertise as enabler — the new intralogistics system represents a scalable model that could inspire similar evolutions across the Group. It embodies the convergence of Lean principles, smart automation, and advanced logistics design — proving that even a multi-level, space-constrained facility can achieve world-class operational excellence through intelligent planning and innovation. Looking ahead, Volpak’s new intralogistics architecture strengthens its role within Coesia’s long-term strategy, setting a clear path toward fully connected, Industry 4.0–ready operations and positioning the Barcelona plant as a reference model for future advancements across the Group.

Empowering Commercial Drivers

Optix, provider of driver safety management and fleet efficiency solutions, is celebrating 25 years of empowering commercial drivers and road users to return safely home. The anniversary comes during a year of significant international growth, marked by global senior hires and increased investment in technologies dedicated to preventing accidents and making roads safer.

A major milestone has been the launch of operations in Europe. This expansion will strengthen the company’s global reach and enable it to connect closely to local markets, providing customers with on-the-ground support and services. With established operations across Africa, the Middle East, Australia, New Zealand and Europe, Optix supports customers in more than 60 countries.

This growth has been bolstered by a number of senior hires, including Damian Penney, who joins as chief revenue officer. Formerly VP EMEA at Lytx, Damian will focus on driving revenue growth and building strategic partnerships that can help fleets to enhance safety, efficiency and productivity.

New technological developments include the launch of Optix’s predictive fatigue detection system designed to react, prevent and predict risks across every journey. With a unique algorithm that can detect 11 indicators of driver fatigue, combined with Early Warning Control Tower Services as well as a predictive Fatigue Forecast Platform, the Optix Fatigue Solution is able to proactively detect driver fatigue and prevent accidents and collisions.

Optix’s central control tower, which reviews up to two million videos per month, enables rapid assessment of critical-risk events and is able to notify managers within three minutes. Last year alone, Optix’s fatigue detection technology was instrumental in helping to save over 80,000 lives.

Our commitment to best-in-class technology has enabled us to keep over 240,000 drivers worldwide safe over the last 25 years.

said Inge-Marie Hilligan, Group Executive for Product and Culture at Optix.

We are very proud of all we have achieved already but there is still work to be done. As we grow we hope to have a positive impact on even more drivers and to fulfil our vision where all road users end their journey Safely Home.

Launched in 2000, Optix began as a pioneer of ‘How’s my driving?’ stickers on commercial vehicles. Recognising the power of video to reduce on-road risk, the company quickly expanded to develop a suite of innovative safety solutions under the name of DriveRisk, before becoming Optix in 2023. Today, its solutions are used by more than 1 million vehicles in more than 60 countries worldwide.

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