Automation

Control that gives structure to the installation

Automation is the layer that organizes the technological process.
It determines the sequence of operations, maintains process parameters, and defines the system’s response to deviations.

We design and implement industrial automation systems for technological installations, process lines, filtration systems, loading and filling stations, and industrial facilities.

Our objective is not only to start up an installation, but to ensure its predictable and stable performance.

Scope of delivery

Within industrial automation, we are responsible for:

  • design of control systems,
  • selection and configuration of PLC controllers,
  • design of HMI operator panels,
  • integration of sensors and actuators,
  • synchronization of equipment operation within technological lines,
  • configuration of safety systems,
  • integration with the existing plant infrastructure.


We define the operational logic of the system and ensure its implementation and commissioning under industrial conditions.

From measurement to decision

An automation system includes:

  • real-time monitoring of process parameters,
  • data logging and archiving,
  • alarm handling and signaling,
  • control of quantities and medium parameters,
  • capability for further analysis of process efficiency.


As a result, automation becomes an operational and management tool, not merely a technical add-on.

Integration with technology

Automation is not developed as a separate layer added to a completed installation. We build it in parallel with the technology, ensuring that the control system reflects the actual logic of the process rather than simply forming a correctly wired electrical system.

The control architecture is developed in close connection with the designed process line, tanks, transfer systems, filtration, filling operations, and loading/unloading stations. This ensures that the installation’s logic remains consistent from the level of a single sensor to the sequence of operation of the entire system.

Automation takes into account the real course of operations: event sequencing, equipment interdependencies, critical control points, and system response to parameter deviations. The objective is to create a technological environment in which the control layer naturally supports the process rather than complicating it.

Consistency and accountability

Separating technology design from automation often results in installations that function technically but lack logical coherence. Workarounds, manual interventions, and inconsistencies in control inevitably appear.

By combining technological design and automation systems within one organization, we ensure clear accountability for overall performance. The installation is not a collection of independent devices with separately engineered control, it is one structured system with predictable behavior.

For the investor, this means greater transparency, simpler project management, and an installation whose operational logic remains consistent from concept through operation.