Venipak: the new terminal symbolically marks a new qualitative stage in the company’s operations
Apr 16, 2025 | E-Commerce, Parcel | 0

International parcel company Venipak is opening a new logistics terminal in Kaunas, Lithuania. The terminal, located next to the Kaunas-Klaipėda highway, is planning to serve more standard and oversized shipments.
The volumes of the latter are expected to double. The company’s largest terminal, which covers an area of 11 thousand sq. meters, will handle up to 50 thousand shipments per day. It is planned to invest 2 million euros in the new terminal, from which about 100 trucks will transport shipments to all Baltic countries and Poland every night.
Andrius Ladauskas, the head of the parcel company Venipak, says that over the past 10 years, while expanding its operations both in Lithuania and in other Baltic countries, the company has outgrown its old terminal in Kaunas. Therefore, the opening of the new terminal symbolically marks a new qualitative stage in the company’s operations – streamlining processes in order to meet growing customer expectations.
“With the rapid growth of e-commerce volumes, the quality, convenience and speed of parcel delivery are becoming increasingly important to customers. For e-commerce businesses, this often becomes a competitive advantage. We believe that this new, modern and much more efficient logistics terminal will not only ensure greater parcel throughput and efficiency of internal processes, but will also help our customers grow even faster. We will be much faster and thus meet the growing needs of our customers,” says A. Ladauskas.
The infrastructure of the new terminal is adapted to sort not only small, standard shipments going to parcel machines, but also oversized cargo and pallet shipments that reach customers – both private individuals and business companies – in all Baltic countries and Poland. It is predicted that the sorting efficiency of non-standard shipments will double.
“By moving to new premises, we ensure significantly higher throughput of shipments, and for business customers in the Baltic States and Poland, this means faster delivery of shipments. We will strive to ensure that shipments reach customers without any disruptions during both normal and intense peak periods. In addition, the new, twice as spacious terminal will provide more comfort for our employees – both due to modern working conditions, rest areas, and arrival at work, as we have arranged for special free transport that brings them from Kaunas to the terminal and back every day,” says Paulius Genevičius, manager of the Venipak Kaunas logistics terminal.
The new terminal project was developed by Sirin Development. A parcel sorting terminal and administrative premises were established in an A++ energy class building. Electric vehicle charging stations were installed on the territory, and administrative premises, several times larger, provided rest areas for employees. The Kaunas terminal employs about 200 employees.
Venipak has a total of 24 logistics terminals in the Baltic States. Kaunas terminal, due to its strategic location, is the main one, serving other terminals in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Every night, 80-100 trucks with shipments leave from here.
The turnover of the Venipak group of companies in the Baltic States grew by almost 10 percent in 2024 and reached EUR 85 million. According to RRT data, Venipak Lietuva is the third largest parcel company in Lithuania in terms of gross revenue from parcel delivery – it occupies 12.5% of the market.
The company, which operates a network of almost 800 parcel machines in the Baltic States, has already invested about 9 million euros in the development of the parcel machine network since 2021, almost 2 million euros more have been invested in sorting lines, and terminals in Vilnius, Riga, and Tallinn have been expanded. In Lithuania, the number of parcel machines has almost doubled over the year – from 270 to 400, and their total capacity has increased by 91 percent. In Latvia, the company has over 200 parcel machines, in Estonia – more than 160.
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