Dexory expands Nashville warehouse intelligence base

Dexory expands Nashville warehouse intelligence base

Dexory has opened a larger Nashville base for US growth. The 50,000 sq ft site will handle deployments, development work, and customer demonstrations across North America.


IN Brief:

  • Dexory has opened a 50,000 sq ft facility in West Nashville as its North American deployment base, development centre, and live demonstration site.
  • The move expands the company’s warehouse intelligence footprint in the US as customers including GXO, Maersk, DHL, NFI, Flexport, and Stellantis adopt DexoryView.
  • A larger on-the-ground base gives Dexory more room to support roll-outs, customer testing, and product development as US demand for continuous warehouse visibility rises.

Dexory has opened a 50,000 sq ft facility in West Nashville, Tennessee, strengthening its North American presence as the warehouse intelligence company pushes further into the US logistics market.

The site will operate as Dexory’s dedicated North American deployment base, development centre, and live customer demonstration environment. For a company selling real-time visibility into warehouse operations, that combination matters. The closer the engineering, deployment, and commercial teams sit to customer sites, the easier it becomes to move from pilot conversations to live operations.

Dexory said the Nashville opening marks the latest step in a broader North American expansion programme. Since entering the US market in early 2024, the company has added customers across logistics, manufacturing, and distribution, while also building out its local leadership and support structure. Its current customer roster in the region includes GXO, Maersk, DHL, NFI, ODW Logistics, Flexport, Iron Mountain, Stellantis, and GE Appliances.

The company’s pitch is straightforward enough. Its autonomous robots move through warehouse aisles, capture stock and location data at height, and feed that information into DexoryView, a software platform designed to flag discrepancies, monitor space usage, and provide a live operational picture without shutting sites down for manual counts. Dexory says the system can scan up to 10,000 pallet locations per hour, which helps explain why the business is now leaning so heavily on deployment capacity rather than simply software development.

“The US is a critical market for Dexory. This facility reflects our long-term commitment to delivering greater value to customers across North America,” said Andrei Danescu, co-founder and CEO of Dexory. “The region’s scale, customer demands and operational complexity push warehouse networks to their limits. That is exactly where Dexory performs best. The more demanding the environment, the more impact our real-time data and actionable insights can deliver.”

Nashville has been part of Dexory’s US strategy for some time, but this is a more substantial commitment than the company’s initial market entry. Dexory opened its North American headquarters there in 2024 after deploying systems across six US states. Since then, it has also closed an $80m Series B round and a $165m Series C round, giving it the capital to scale both hardware and software operations more aggressively.

That funding history matters because warehouse robotics businesses rarely grow on product alone. They grow on installation capacity, support, integration work, and enough local presence to reassure large operators that the technology will still be there after the contract is signed. A 50,000 sq ft base does not solve every scaling problem, but it does suggest Dexory is preparing for a heavier volume of North American roll-outs rather than treating the region as a sales outpost.

For warehouse operators, the significance is less about the building itself than what it supports. Dexory is betting that continuous, autonomous inventory intelligence is moving out of the innovation budget and into routine operations. Nashville now looks set up as the place where that bet gets tested at much larger scale.


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