SUVs and electric SUVs roll off Tuscaloosa County's assembly line by the thousands, produced at a major automaker's first North American vehicle plant, announced in 1993 and now employing more than 6,100 people directly while supporting over 11,000 additional supplier jobs across the region. Component manufacturers supplying that plant's steering, chassis, and logistics needs operate their own facilities nearby, running robotics and precision automation as a matter of daily routine rather than a novelty. Every changeover still matters, and packaging automation belongs in that same conversation: Tuscaloosa already has a workforce comfortable running programmable, sensor-driven equipment, machines that need skilled operators rather than unskilled line labor.
That same industrial base includes a steel producer, a tire manufacturer, and a roofing-materials manufacturer, all major employers in the city, part of a manufacturing tradition that traces back to the 1890s, when U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lock-and-dam work on the Black Warrior River first connected Tuscaloosa to the Gulf Coast port of Mobile. We don't have a facility in Tuscaloosa, but manufacturers in that same industrial corridor already run the equipment we supply. You know your production line; we know how to case and palletize what comes off it to the same standard your auto-plant neighbors run to. Automatic case erectors form and seal cases for whatever comes off the line, case packers load them, and PackMaster cobot palletizers stack the finished pallets with that same consistency. Our Alabama location page covers the region, our case-former machine category and a case study on elevating co-packing with automated solutions dig into specifics, the palletizing category and automatic case packer lineup detail the machines themselves, and our solutions page holds the complete catalog.