Technology

800 Degrees Pizza will add thousands of units with robot company Piestro

Feeling pandemic pressure, the wood-fired concept reinvented itself to work with Piestro's automated pizza makers.
Anthony Carron and Massimo De Marco
Anthony Carron and Massimo De Marco / Photograph courtesy of Piestro

Fast-casual pizza chain 800 Degrees plans to expand its footprint in a big way over the next five years through a partnership with robotics company Piestro.

800 Degrees, which had 15 units worldwide at the end of 2020, will add up to 3,600 outposts over the next five years in the form of Piestro automated pizza makers. The 800 Degrees by Piestro machines will be located in high-traffic areas like airports and hospitals and accessible 24/7.  

Anthony Carron, who founded the wood-fired Neapolitan pizza chain in 2012, said the partnership is a way to "future-proof" the brand in light of the pandemic and consumers' increasing demand for delivery and takeout.

"When [Piestro CEO Massimo De Marco] and I first connected about Piestro’s technology, I saw both the immediate and long-term impact automation could have on our business," the chef said in a statement.

That impact includes the promise of fast, consistent pizza, as well as the ability to grow quickly. 

“[Restaurants] can really expand fast, and for a lot less money” with Piestro, De Marco told Restaurant Businessin an October interview. At the time, each machine cost $60,000, with the restaurant responsible for restocking and basic upkeep. 

800 Degrees by Piestro machinePhotograph courtesy of Piestro

The fully automated, stand-alone machines can make a pizza in three minutes and can hold enough ingredients for 80 pizzas. Customers place their order on a touchscreen and watch through a window as their pie is made.

Carron worked with De Marco to adapt 800 Degrees' wood-fired recipes for the machines, keeping the focus on fresh ingredients and an "artisan" final product. The result was a "completely new version" of the 800 Degrees brand, the companies said.

The two are still ironing out the specifics of where and when 800 Degrees by Piestro will be deployed. For now, they're focused on "scaling the technology and designing new recipes" to ensure a quality product, a representative said in an email.

“This partnership is a clear indicator of the interest and potential for automation within the pizza industry,” De Marco said in a statement. 

The pizza segment has been particularly active in terms of automation. Piestro competitor Basil Street plans to have its own pizza machines in 100 locations by the end of the year, and Picnic, which makes a robot that tops pizzas, is also starting to scale up.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Operations

Hitting resistance elsewhere, ghost kitchens and virtual concepts find a happy home in family dining

Reality Check: Old-guard chains are finding the alternative operations to be persistently effective side hustles.

Financing

The Tijuana Flats bankruptcy highlights the dangers of menu miscues

The Bottom Line: The fast-casual chain’s problems following new menu debuts in 2021 and 2022 show that adding new items isn’t always the right idea.

Financing

Malls are quietly making a comeback

Once left for dead as shoppers moved online and then the pandemic hit, malls are regaining lost traffic. And that has been a boon for restaurant chains like Auntie Anne's, Cinnabon and Chick-fil-A.

Trending

More from our partners