Industrial Design Case Study: A Grocery Packaging Elimination System

When startup Purcell set out to create a new, packaging-reducing dispensing system for grocery stores, they turned to design and engineering consultancy 219 Design.

Purcell is bringing disruptive innovation to the grocery aisle. 219 Design and Purcell have teamed up to design a sustainable, modern IoT solution for food merchandising. The S1 introduces a new way to merchandise that moves the packaging to the purchase phase – eliminating those half empty bags and boxes we are all only too familiar with.

Modernizing Food Merchandising

The Purcell S1 isn’t just a bulk food dispenser, it’s a brand new way to merchandise food. As a result, Purcell needed a development partner with experience across software, firmware, mechanical, and electronic engineering. They also needed a development firm with a breadth of expertise spanning IOT connectivity, sensors, displays, microcontroller, load cells, mechanism design, mobile app development, and more.

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Building The First Prototype

219 Design was hired to develop the first fully functional S1 prototype. Part of our process is to break large scale projects into smaller phases to address high-risk areas early on. This ensures that we are always making incremental progress while working toward the main goal.

Phase 1: De-risking and System Architecture

During this phase, we focused on developing the overall system architecture, as well as addressing several areas of known technical risk.

We were able to converge on a simple, low-cost solution to one of the primary technical challenges: by using pull-cables and isolated mounting points, we were able to fully decouple the forces on the dispensing handle from the load cell the bin was resting on.

Phase 2: Detailed Design

With Phase 1 complete, we then transitioned into the Detailed Design phase. This is where the core of our engineering development takes place and was focused on developing a fully-specified design for the pilot build. Rather than working in silos, our mechanical, software, and electronic teams came together and worked as a team to design a cohesive solution.

Phase 3: Final Prototype Integration and Build

Phase 3 was focused on integrating, debugging, and preparing the S1 prototype for pilot deployment.

The Solution

The result is a hygienic IoT-enabled dispenser for the merchandising of many free-flowing products using a proprietary, airtight, and standardized cartridge system. Both the retailer and shopper benefit from lower costs, immersive marketing experiences, portion control, and zero waste.

What’s Next?

For Purcell, the end goal is to redesign grocery supply chains with a flatpack for food and everyday essentials similar to the supply chain IKEA created for furniture. After successful implementations with retailers and brands, Purcell is refining the design for manufacturing to meet outstanding demand. Hopefully you will see an S1 dispenser in your local supermarket soon!

“We put a lot of effort into finding projects where we can not only add value, but that also make a difference in the world. Purcell’s S1 was a perfect combination of those two objectives. Our partnership and shared vision resulted in a fantastic solution.” —Miguel Piedrahita, Co-Founder, 219 Design

You can see more of 219 Design’s work here.

Source: core77

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