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Custom case saves waste for winery

A specially designed 12-count corrugated case for small-volume winery Terrien provides a more sustainable packaging solution through a sophisticated, sturdy structure.

Pw 44581 Thebox

Napa, CA-based Terrien Wines may be a small, niche player in the wine business, but when it needed an elegant, sustainable solution for shipping its Chardonnay, it received the red-carpet treatment from package supplier Unisource Worldwide, Inc. and its new Engineered Solutions division (UES). UES developed a sturdy, custom shipper for the winery that addressed owner Michael Terrien’s desire for an environmentally friendly solution with a simple, clean aesthetic that could meet the rigors of distribution.

“I was surprised that the design team at Unisource was willing to address this challenge, because I don’t represent much revenue for them,” says Terrien. “But it has been a pleasure to have that connection with them and the engagement of their expertise.”

Terrien Wine launched in 2011, offering a 2007 vintage Chardonnay. The vintner sells primarily Direct-to-Consumer (DTC), selling its wines to restaurants and collectors, with a small amount of product sold through distributors. With larger wine producers, product is typically packaged in compact, corrugated shippers that are palletized 56 cases to a pallet and sent to distributors. At the distribution center, the wine is removed from the shipper and repacked in a bulkier box that uses polystyrene or molded pulp to cushion the bottles for shipment DTC. The original packaging is then recycled.

Terrien’s vision for his packaging was a compact, 12-bottle laydown case that would eliminate the need for repacking and for the use of PS, and could meet UPS and FedEx shipping requirements. “I wanted to be able to have no waste in the system,” says Terrien. “I also did not want to use polystyrene, for environmental reasons. And, when you use polystyrene, it increases bulk, and if you have to figure in bulk, you can’t use the package on pallets going to distributors.”

According to Rodney Levitt, director, Wine Packaging Sales, Unisource, who led the Terrien project, the challenge was to create the larger, 12-count case size using only corrugated material. “We had successfully done twos, threes, and sixes for years, but we never attacked a 12-pack,” he says. With the help of engineers at the UES Cerritos, CA, facility, Unisource was able to develop what Terrien refers to as an “origami-like” folding structure made from 100% corrugated material that uses no adhesive and is suitable for shipping both DTC as well as to distributors.

Enhanced engineering capabilities
The Cerritos UES facility is one of two new centers—the other is in New Berlin, WI—staffed by Unisource structural engineers and graphic designers, who are capable of developing primary, secondary, and/or tertiary packaging, as well as point-of-purchase displays, for virtually any product category. While Unisource’s forte has typically been in corrugated, stretch wrap, and tape, the centers work with a range of packaging materials.

Before the launch of UES, Unisource operated two design centers that catered to customers looking for corrugated and folding cartons. “Within the last year, as we rebranded into our engineering centers, we now call ourselves ‘material-neutral,’” says UES director Steve Alagna. “Now not only can we do corrugated and folding carton, but we also can do molded foam, fabricated foam, thermoforming, and flexible packaging, among other materials. We have even done wood and cloth.”

The two mirror-image centers are equipped with graphic design capabilities, including the ability to provide printed or plain mockups and photography. Prototyping centers at each facility use a Formtech 508FS thermoformer, a Dimension 1200es SST 3D printer, and a Kongsberg XL 24 cutting machine. The centers are also outfitted with complete ISTA-certified labs that can perform tests including performance, vibration, compression, shock, and drop tests, among others, on both products and packaging.

“I do not know of any other supplier that will do product testing,” notes Alagna. “Customers are open to the idea. If you can show them the advantages, oftentimes they are willing to make changes to their products to make them more rugged.”

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