The race to modernize grocery fulfillment continues to accelerate, and the latest investment by Dematic and Pattison Food Group provides another example of how leading retailers are rethinking distribution operations for an increasingly demanding market.
Pattison Food Group recently announced plans to expand its grocery fulfillment capabilities in Langley, British Columbia, with Dematic providing the automation technology. The project is designed to increase throughput, improve operational efficiency, and better support the company’s growing omnichannel business across its family of grocery banners.
The announcement is notable not simply because of the technology involved, but because it reflects a broader transformation taking place throughout the grocery supply chain. Retailers are increasingly finding that traditional warehouse operations struggle to keep pace with higher order volumes, tighter delivery windows, labor constraints, and rising customer expectations. Automation is becoming less about replacing labor and more about enabling distribution networks to operate with greater consistency, resilience, and scalability.
According to the announcement, the Langley facility will support several of Pattison Food Group’s retail banners while improving fulfillment capacity for both store replenishment and e-commerce operations. Dematic described the project as combining automation with software designed to optimize material flow throughout the facility.
As Mike Larsson, President of Dematic, stated in the company’s announcement:
“Dematic’s strength extends beyond automation to a deep understanding of the operational realities shaping modern grocery fulfillment.”
That observation captures an important shift occurring across warehouse automation. For many years, the conversation centered on hardware—conveyors, sortation systems, automated storage, and robotics. Today, competitive advantage increasingly comes from how intelligently those assets are orchestrated.
Warehouse execution software, optimization algorithms, inventory visibility, labor coordination, and AI-assisted decision making are becoming as important as the physical automation itself. The warehouse is evolving into an adaptive operating system capable of continuously balancing demand, inventory, labor availability, and transportation constraints.
This trend extends well beyond a single project. Companies including AutoStore, Swisslog, Exotec, SSI Schaefer, Honeywell Intelligrated, Geek+, and GreyOrange continue to expand the range of automation technologies available to distribution operations. While their approaches differ—from cube storage systems and autonomous mobile robots to robotic picking and integrated warehouse execution—the strategic objective is remarkably consistent: enable warehouses to respond more quickly and efficiently to increasingly dynamic demand.
For grocery retailers, the challenge is especially demanding. Fresh products, frozen goods, ambient inventory, online orders, store replenishment, and last-mile delivery all place competing demands on the same distribution infrastructure. Fulfillment operations must manage high SKU counts, rapid inventory turnover, and strict quality requirements while maintaining service levels that consumers increasingly take for granted.
These operational realities are driving investment in automation platforms that are flexible rather than highly specialized. Instead of building facilities optimized for one workflow, retailers are looking for systems that can evolve as order profiles, labor markets, and customer expectations continue to change.
Artificial intelligence is also beginning to play a larger role within these environments. Predictive demand forecasting, dynamic slotting, labor optimization, equipment monitoring, and real-time operational decision support are becoming integrated capabilities rather than standalone applications. The combination of automation and AI allows facilities not only to move inventory efficiently but also to continuously adapt to changing operating conditions.
Projects like Pattison’s therefore represent more than another warehouse installation. They illustrate how grocery fulfillment is becoming increasingly software-defined, where physical automation, intelligent orchestration, and data-driven decision making work together as a unified operational platform.
As retailers continue investing in omnichannel capabilities, automation is likely to become less of a competitive differentiator and more of a foundational requirement. The organizations that succeed will be those that view automation not simply as a collection of machines, but as an integrated operational capability that enables resilience, scalability, and continuous improvement across the supply chain.
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