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ACPaaS Robotic Picking

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ACPaaS Robotic Picking

ACPaaS Robotic Picking

Swisslog

Not yet assessed

Height
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
not assessed
Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage

ACPaaS Robotic Picking

Swisslog
Unverified

ACPaaS Robotic Picking is not a single product but a category label covering multiple distinct robotic picking systems from different vendors (Amazon Robotics, Swisslog/AutoStore, Brightpick, Mujin, Cognibotics, ABB, Hai Robotics, and academic research teams). The extracted facts span warehouse goods-to-person systems, mobile picking AMRs, industrial bin-picking arms, and competition robots, with no single unified 'ACPaaS' product identifiable. Across these systems, the dominant pattern is autonomous task execution (robots performing picks without a human doing the task), with human roles limited to setup, maintenance, and occasional G2P fallback for items the robot cannot pick. Independent evidence confirms real-world deployment at scale (200M+ packages, 1,500+ projects, 20+ AutoStore sites) but also documents known failure modes including unknown SKUs, occlusion, and policy deployment gaps.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

sku_range
Ambient and chilled groceries, pharmaceuticals, medical devices, packaged goods, cosmetics, electronics, polybagged apparel, aerospace parts

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Swisslog deep report

Good
  • Swisslog's entry-level systems start at approximately $1M USD, with mid-range systems (50,000 bins, 2–8 robots) costing $3–5M USD and large enterprise systems reaching tens of millions USD.

    The independent MWPVL logistics consultancy review [7] provides these specific price ranges, representing a third-party analyst assessment rather than vendor-supplied figures, though the data may reflect pre-2020 pricing and current quotes could differ.

    from Swisslog deep report →
Bad
  • Swisslog's AutoStore robots, ASRS cranes/shuttles, and CycloneCarrier systems perform storage, retrieval, and order fulfillment autonomously — without human operators driving or performing those tasks — orchestrated by SynQ software.

    The dossier's autonomy verdict (confidence 0.9) is derived primarily from Swisslog's own official sources [1][2][3][4][10][12]; no independent third-party test, regulator, or customer audit is cited to verify the specific claim that zero human intervention occurs in the retrieval/storage loop.

    from Swisslog deep report →
  • Swisslog's AutoStore deployment at Albert Heijn (Netherlands) handles 45,000 e-grocery orders per week.

    This figure appears in Swisslog's own official sources [3]; no independent journalist, analyst, or Albert Heijn public statement in the dossier corroborates the specific 45,000-orders/week throughput figure.

    from Swisslog deep report →
  • The Medline deployment in Aurora, CO uses 94 AutoStore robots and is an active, shipped installation (not a pilot or demo).

    Source [12] is a Swisslog press release from its own newsroom, not an independent customer or media report; the robot count and operational status have not been verified by a third party in the dossier.

    from Swisslog deep report →
  • Swisslog's SynQ software platform can orchestrate autonomous forklifts alongside AutoStore robots within a single unified system, as demonstrated in the 2025 Sumitomo Drive Technologies USA deployment.

    Source [10] is Swisslog's own press release about the Sumitomo partnership; no independent verification of SynQ's multi-robot orchestration capability or the deployment's operational status exists in the dossier.

    from Swisslog deep report →
  • Swisslog systems support 30+ years of continuous operation with lifecycle services.

    This claim originates solely from Swisslog's official website [1]; no independent customer case study, industry audit, or third-party analyst report in the dossier confirms that any specific installation has actually operated continuously for 30+ years under Swisslog's lifecycle support.

    from Swisslog deep report →
Ugly
  • Swisslog Healthcare's pneumatic tube systems deliver $1,314,000 in annual savings per customer.

    This precise figure comes from Swisslog Healthcare's own official site and a PR Newswire press release [8][9] — both vendor-controlled channels; no independent hospital, health system audit, or third-party study in the dossier substantiates this specific savings claim.

    from Swisslog deep report →
  • Swisslog has installations in 50 countries with approximately 2,000 employees across 20 countries.

    The MWPVL review [7] provides these figures but is explicitly flagged in the dossier as likely pre-2015 era data, predating the KUKA acquisition; current headcount and geographic footprint are unverified and likely materially different.

    from Swisslog deep report →

About the company

Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.