Hawthorne builds spacecraft, not snack food, and that precision-manufacturing bar shapes what local packaging equipment buyers expect too. A private aerospace and rocket manufacturer assembles spacecraft in a building originally built for aircraft production, now the city's largest employer at roughly 6,094 people as of 2021. That building's aerospace history runs deeper still: the aircraft manufacturer that built it was founded in Hawthorne in 1939 and went on to build a WWII fighter plane before developing the flying-wing designs that eventually led to the stealth bomber. A toy manufacturer got its start here too, founded in Hawthorne in 1945 before relocating to a neighboring city decades later, and Hawthorne today also hosts a tunneling-and-infrastructure company and a manufacturer of security and inspection scanning systems. That bar carries over. The city runs a working cluster of precision manufacturing well beyond food and beverage.
Our own case studies include a food producer that moved to automated case packing once volume outpaced a hand-packing line, the same tipping point a Hawthorne-area food or beverage producer eventually hits. Automatic case packers box product into cases at that pace without adding headcount every time volume climbs, while our PackMaster cobot palletizers stack finished cases onto pallets with the same precision Hawthorne's aerospace and robotics manufacturers already expect from their own equipment. A Hawthorne food or beverage producer answers to retail spec, not aerospace tolerance, but we case and palletize to the same precision standard the neighborhood already expects. We keep the case packers and palletizers in stock rather than building either to order, sized by our solutions team for South Bay food and beverage producers who'd rather match Hawthorne's aerospace-grade bar than settle for less.