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    prologis

    Explore "prologis" with insightful episodes like "Interviews croisées de Franck Blot du groupe Bils-Deroo et de Vincent Sadé de Prologis France", "Episode 150 | Prologis Prepares for the Future of Logistics with Autonomous Trucks, A Conversation with Todd Lewis", "Guest: Melinda McLaughlin of Prologis on the industrial real estate market; Walmart commits to building microfulfillment centers inside its stores; Study shows increasing demand for good-to-person technologies" and "Commercial Real Estate Market Overview" from podcasts like ""VOXLOG Magazine - Logistique & Supply Chain", "The Road to Autonomy", "Logistics Matters with DC VELOCITY" and "Lusk Perspectives"" and more!

    Episodes (4)

    Interviews croisées de Franck Blot du groupe Bils-Deroo et de Vincent Sadé de Prologis France

    Interviews croisées de Franck Blot du groupe Bils-Deroo et de Vincent Sadé de Prologis France

    Le 15 février 2024, Prologis célebrait avec Simastock (groupe Bils-Deroo) l’inauguration de son bâtiment Douvrin DC3, de près de 45 000 m², dans le Pas-de-Calais.

    Au micro de Voxlog, Franck Blot, directeur général de Bils-Deroo et Vincent Sadé, directeur de l’investissement et du développement de Prologis en France, détaillent via deux interviews croisées les qualités de ce nouvel entrepôt et les besoins ayant nécessité sa construction.

    Episode 150 | Prologis Prepares for the Future of Logistics with Autonomous Trucks, A Conversation with Todd Lewis

    Episode 150 | Prologis Prepares for the Future of Logistics with Autonomous Trucks, A Conversation with Todd Lewis

    Todd Lewis, Vice President, Prologis Ventures, Prologis joined Grayson Brulte on The Road to Autonomy podcast to discuss how Prologis is preparing for the future of logistics with autonomous trucks.

    The conversation begins with Todd discussing how Prologis is approaching the future of autonomy as autonomous trucks will be operating at their customers facilities. 

    Our role across many of our customers footprints is how can we be an accelerant for adoption, for things that can be transformative to their bottom line, to their top line, to their day-to-day growth. Because we want to have customers that can thrive using our existing footprint today. – Todd Lewis

    To prepare their facilities for autonomous trucking, Prologis is putting plans in place today to update the infrastructure and add services such as fiber to support autonomous operations. As Prologis plans for autonomy, the company is taking a measured approach to leasing by hedging their capital risk for infrastructure development and capital investment.

    To limit their capital risk, Prologis develops their infrastructure to be future-proofed. Whether it’s the switch to electric vehicles and laying the conduit needed for energy to designing the yards for autonomous trucks, Prologis is developing for the future. 

    From an underwriting perspective, the company has a robust due diligence process that looks at the long-term viability of the potential company leasing the real estate. Including if they have a corporate parent with superior credit and a healthy balance sheet who could co-sign the lease.

    We choose partners that have the highest likeliness of success. We try to stay true to picking partners and customers who have operations and new business practices that have, what we would consider staying power. – Todd Lewis

    To prepare for all the changes currently happening in the market, Prologis created a mobility division to focus on accelerating EV adoption and preparing for autonomy. Focused both on automation outside and inside the facility as by 2027, it is projected that 26% of all warehouses will have some level of automation.

    I believe that you have to enable automation in order for it to be properly utilized. It’s the nuances that matter. – Todd Lewis

    Outside of the facility, the yard of the future is going to change as there will be autonomous truck launch and landing pads. The changes from an infrastructure standpoint will be minor, but from a human interaction standpoint, major. As both autonomous trucks and human driven trucks will operate at the same facility.

    The interaction with the human element is something that over time will have to be fleshed out a bit, in order for those systems to work properly. – Todd Lewis

    Wrapping up the conversation, shares his thoughts on the future of logistics. 


    Recorded on Monday, July 10, 2023

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    Guest: Melinda McLaughlin of Prologis on the industrial real estate market; Walmart commits to building microfulfillment centers inside its stores; Study shows increasing demand for good-to-person technologies

    Guest: Melinda McLaughlin of Prologis on the industrial real estate market; Walmart commits to building microfulfillment centers inside its stores; Study shows increasing demand for good-to-person technologies

    In this episode, guest Melinda McLaughlin, vice president, global head of research for Prologis, discusses the market for industrial real estate. The lack of new construction last year, especially during the early phases of the pandemic, has left capacity very tight and rental costs high. What is the outlook for 2021, and how are trends such as e-commerce and urban fulfillment designs affecting the  real estate market for warehousing?

    Walmart is partnering with three industrial suppliers to build automated microfulfillment centers within many of its stores. The automation will allow it to more quickly process online orders for pickup or delivery. Will this type of concept be able to expand the reach of brick-and-mortar retailers and allow them to better compete with large online retailers like Amazon?

    Demand for goods-to-person technologies, where robots or automation systems bring products directly to workers, are growing in popularity. What are the factors driving this demand, and is this the future of distribution center design?

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    Podcast sponsored by DCV-TV

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