Roseville sits along a rail corridor that has shaped its economy since 1864, when tracks first reached the town. By 1929 the railroad employed 1,225 of the town's 6,425 residents, the backbone of the local economy at the time. In 1913 the city built what was then the largest ice-manufacturing plant in the world, producing ice to keep refrigerated rail cars of produce cold on their way east, an early and direct link to modern food cold-chain logistics. That link still holds. A major rail classification yard still runs through Roseville today, and demand for packaging automation along that corridor has grown well beyond produce.
That logistics backbone has pulled newer industries into Roseville, including hospital systems and a medical-device manufacturer now among the city's largest employers. Packaging for that kind of production answers to different rules than food packaging, but the underlying need is precise, repeatable output regardless of product. Our stick pack and sachet machines handle single-dose products cleanly, and our EliteWeigh checkweighers verify every fill before it leaves the line, catching variance a regulated producer can't afford. A regulated producer bringing in new packaging equipment needs it installed and running correctly from day one. Our crews handle that setup on-site, and in-stock units mean a Roseville producer can get a line going without months on a wait list. Our solutions team sizes each line to the product involved and the floor space a producer actually has to work with.