Building 'Project Legoland' lor Sam's Club

Considerations such as stress modeling and pattern shrink factored into Ecolab’s award-winning nested, stackable, and bundled container of cleaning solution.

Pw 8621 Ecolab

At Ecolab Inc. in St. Paul, MN, a package-development project aptly nicknamed “Project Legoland” resulted in an award-winning package that represents several unique technical accomplishments.

Containing Ecolab’s ProForce Cleaners, either a multipurpose cleaner or a bath and bowl cleaner, the multicomponent package combines a 16-oz everyday dispensing bottle that fits neatly into a pocket molded into a much larger 1.25-gal bottle. The consumer refills the smaller dispensing bottle from the larger bottle. Sold at Sam’s Club stores for about $7, the package:

has a square footprint for good cube efficiency

 meets the retailer’s specific criteria with its palletizing pattern, and

delivers convenience to users with a cleaning “kit” approach.

The package won Best of Show in the National Association of Container Distributors (www.nacd.net) 2007 Packaging Awards Competition announced earlier this year. The 16-oz dispensing bottle is extrusion blown of high-density polyethylene by MGS Mfg. Group (www.mgstech.com.) The 1.25-gal container, measuring 7 1/2”x5 1/4”x11 1/2”, is extrusion blown of high-density polyethylene by Fortco Plastics (www.fortco.com). TricorBraun (www.tricorbraun), the container distributor that supplied both bottles and other components to Ecolab, played a key role in the design and manufacturing of this award-winning package.

In addition to the two bottles, the package comes with a dispensing spray fitment on the 16-oz bottle, and a spigot (used for refilling the smaller bottle) that fits alongside the 16-oz bottle in the pocket of the larger bottle. There’s also two screw caps on the top, a larger one where the spigot goes to dispense the cleaner, and a small cap that reveals a vent hole. Holding everything together is a polyvinylchloride shrink band from AmeriSeal (www.ameri-seal.com).

Designed with Wal-Mart’s sustainability initiative in mind, the packaging was introduced at Sam’s Club in April 2006 and was in full distribution by June, says Tina Outlaw, Ecolab’s director of global supply quality. She says the packaging is a big improvement over a bag-in-box approach that Ecolab discontinued several years ago.

For one thing, its rectangular shape yields efficiencies in handling, shipment, and store display. Outlaw says an 80-count, two-layer-high unit load achieves 98.5% of “perfect” pallet utilization. Merchandising is maximized whether containers are left on the pallet, put on the shelf, or placed on end-cap in store. The format targets Sam’s small-business customers, who purchase most of the ProForce products.

Outlaw says the development was known as Project Legoland because the container could be stacked in different orientations. She was assisted in the development by a hand-picked team (see teamwork sidebar below).

The package development involved several challenges, starting with the 1.25-gal bottle.

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