One of the world's largest food and beverage companies keeps one of its two corporate headquarters in downtown Pittsburgh, a detail that says as much about the city's food-industry gravity as any single factory. Packaging automation demand in Pittsburgh's confectionery sector extends well past that corporate presence. A contract manufacturer formed from a 2024 merger of two snack-bar producers runs eight U.S. plants out of its Pittsburgh headquarters, making nutrition bars, chocolate-moulded pieces, and baked granola snacks for other brands. Eight plants, one packaging problem. A family-owned dairy processor across town bottles and co-packs fresh milk, iced tea, juice, cream, and ice-cream mixes for commercial partners, adding liquid-fill volume to the same regional supply base.
Our case study on bringing automated solutions to a co-packing operation covers exactly this scale-up: contract manufacturers adding capacity without adding headcount. If you're running chocolate-moulded and granola bar lines, that typically means Pack Series flow wrapping and automatic feeding systems paired with vertical form-fill-seal (VFFS) packaging machines for pouched snack formats, plus checkweighers and metal detection to hold food-safety specs across multiple co-packing contracts. Liquid-fill dairy runs call for a different setup entirely, built around auger and case-packing equipment rather than flow wrap. Check our confectionery industry page and Pennsylvania location page for the full machine list; our solutions page will then walk you through specifying your line from filling through inspection.