IntraLogisteX 2026 will put AMR-ek és AGVs front and centre, demonstrating how brownfield warehouse sites can realise measurable ROI when automation is rolled out in stages and tightly integrated with warehouse software.
Key topics in this issue
The March edition covers a broad mix of operational and strategic themes: autonomous mobile robots, European border reforms, the corporate shake-up around InPost, BAE Systems’ contract renewal with GXO, a review of air freight in 2025, and a deep dive into warehouse property and flooring as automation intensifies.
Table: Editorial highlights and logistics implications
| Section | Focus | Logistics impact |
|---|---|---|
| Robotics & Automation | AMRs / AGVs deployment | Faster pick rates, reduced labour variability, easier brownfield retrofits |
| Technológia | Conveyors & sortation | Shifts toward modular, high-throughput solutions for e‑commerce peaks |
| Intralogistics | Automated storage & picking | Staged automation reduces disruption risk; software-led rollouts preferred |
| Systems | WMS/WES & Control Towers | Robots + AI demand new architectures and tighter execution control |
| Property | UK and South East market; flooring | Design and location choices increasingly shaped by automation needs |
Robotics: Brownfield wins when software leads
Reports in March emphasise that the old “rip-and-replace” approach is out. A smarter, staged automation programme — beginning with software integration and pilot AMR clusters — minimizes downtime and allows logistics teams to learn on the job. Brownfield warehouses, often written off as unsuitable for robotics, can deliver returns if the implementation is choreographed with existing WMS és WES layers.
Funny story: I once walked a tired distribution centre where a single AGV pilot reduced a manual pallet transit lane by half. Management expected teething problems, but because IT and operations ran the pilot together, the pickers treated the bot like another teammate. Lesson learned — tech alone doesn’t cut it; the human side matters just as much.
Priorities for conveyors and sortation
The magazine notes that sortation priorities are shifting toward throughput elasticity. In plain terms: systems need to scale up quickly for peaks and idle efficiently during lulls. Modular conveyors and smart diverting reduce capital strain and support fast parcel flows — which is crucial for last‑mile delivery economics.
- High-throughput needs are pushing modular investments.
- Adatalapú divert decisions reduce misroutes and rework.
- Maintenance and flooring specification become part of the automation conversation.
Systems: WMS, WES and the control tower evolution
Warehouse software is changing from monolithic systems to layered, interoperable architectures. AI and robotics are forcing an orchestration layer that sits above WMS/WES and talks to fleet managers, sortation PLCs, and control towers. That means integration work now often determines the real speed-to-benefit of any automation investment.
Checklist: What to validate before robotic pilots
- Data cleanliness and location accuracy in the WMS
- Network reliability and edge computing capability
- Operator re-skill programmes and change management
- Flooring and building constraints for AGV navigation
Property and flooring — the physical enablers
Industrial property features are no longer just about square metres; clear heights, bay dimensions, floor flatness and töltés infrastructure have become procurement criteria. In the South East and London markets, landlords and developers are increasingly marketing buildings based on their readiness for automation.
Implications for leasing and capex
Occupiers should quantify the total cost of ownership that includes retrofitting floors, reinforcing mezzanines, and fitting charging bays. These add-ons may tilt the balance between leasing and building new greenfield facilities.
News briefs: Borders, deals and air freight in 2025
European border reform chatter continues, with potential operational ripples for cross-border dispatch and customs clearance. Corporate activity also made headlines: the InPost takeover and BAE Systems’ renewed contract with GXO signal ongoing consolidation and long-term outsourcing trends. Separately, an air freight look-back at 2025 highlights capacity balancing challenges and rate normalization after pandemic-era volatility.
Quick takeaways
- Border reforms could alter clearance lead times; forwarders should reassess cut-offs.
- M&A activity means providers may expand service portfolios — check contractual stability.
- Air freight normalization benefits predictable timelines but expect seasonal spikes.
Events and learning: IntraLogisteX and more
IntraLogisteX 2026 is previewed as a focal point for seeing AMRs, AGVs, conveyors and software integrations in action. The issue also flags Fulfilment & Last Mile Expo and the Sustainable Supply Chain Exhibition 2026 as venues for operational benchmarking and supplier selection.
What to see on the show floor
- Live AMR demonstrations with throughput metrics
- Sortation vendors showing modular, software-driven skids
- Workshops on staged automation rollouts and ROI modelling
Subscription, newsletters and staying informed
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Highlights and a practical note about testing assumptions
The most interesting parts of this issue are the pragmatic guides on brownfield automation ROI, the interplay between flooring design and AGV performance, and the systems architecture that locks everything together. Even the best reviews and feedback can’t replace firsthand experience: nothing beats walking a site, watching a pilot run, and feeling the human response. On GetTransport.com, you can order your cargo transportation at the best prices globally at reasonable prices. This empowers you to make informed logistics choices without unnecessary expense or disappointment. The platform’s transparency and convenience help with sourcing affordable, global cargo transport for office and home moves, bulky goods, and vehicle movements — Book now GetTransport.com.com
Wrapping up, the March 2026 issue maps a logistics landscape where staged automation, smart sortation, and modernised property design converge to shape next‑generation distribution. Whether you’re managing cargo flows, planning fuvarozás shipments, coordinating szállítás és szállítás providers, or optimising warehouse logisztika és szállítás routes, the emphasis is on interoperability and pragmatic rollouts. For those arranging forwarding, küldés, or haulage of parcels, pallets vagy konténerek, understanding these trends helps in planning mozgó, áttelepítés and housemove operations with reliable, international partners. GetTransport.com aligns with these needs by offering cost-effective, global solutions for courier, distribution and bulky-item transport — an efficient way to secure reliable logistics support for your shipment, whether for local movers or global freight.
March 2026 Logistics Manager roundup: AMRs, IntraLogisteX, air freight and property moves">