Packaging automation looks different in Germantown today than it did a century ago, even though the town has been making things the whole time. Germantown sits on Maryland's I-270 biotech corridor, home today to the North American headquarters of a diagnostics and biotech company, a satellite-communications firm, and several life-sciences and aerospace offices, including a personal-care and life-sciences unit tied to a major consumer-goods company. Long before any of that, a flour and feed mill opened here in 1918, grew into the second-largest mill in Maryland, supplied flour to the U.S. Army during World War II, and was significant enough that Germantown became the first part of northern Montgomery County to get electricity, brought in specifically to power it. Arson destroyed the mill in 1972, but the corridor's need for filling and packaging equipment, from flour sacks then to regulated biotech and personal-care lines now, never really left.
We already work with manufacturers across Maryland, and our powder and granular industries page covers exactly the equipment a regulated corridor like this one needs: auger and powder filling machines (EliteFill) that hold fill weights tight for diagnostic reagents, supplement powders, or personal-care formulas, and pre-made pouch and bagging lines (EcoBagger) for finished product that has to be traceable and consistent from batch to batch. Germantown's mill ground flour to a specified grade a century ago; its biotech and personal-care producers hold formulas to a specified potency now. We hold the fill weight to match it, batch after batch. Fill weights can't drift. Our solutions page is a good starting point for any biotech, personal-care, or specialty-food producer in the corridor sizing up what a compliant, repeatable fill line actually requires.