
Selecting the right AI-powered video analytics platform can determine whether your industrial facility achieves measurable safety improvements or simply adds another monitoring tool to your tech stack. While Arvist focuses on warehouse quality control and shipment verification, and Lumana offers comprehensive enterprise security features, Voxel delivers purpose-built workplace safety intelligence with certified safety professional support. Understanding these fundamental differences helps EHS leaders and operations teams select the approach that matches their injury prevention goals, compliance requirements, and operational efficiency objectives.
When industrial facilities need AI-powered video analytics, the choice between general security platforms and purpose-built safety solutions becomes critical. Three distinct approaches represent fundamentally different philosophies toward workplace protection. While Arvist operates as a quality control and compliance automation platform for warehouses, and Lumana provides comprehensive enterprise video security, Voxel delivers specialized site intelligence focused on reducing workplace injuries and operational risk. This comparison shows why Voxel's safety-first approach is especially well aligned with EHS professionals and operations teams at warehouses, manufacturing plants, distribution centers, and ports.
Voxel takes a specialized approach to workplace safety and operational risk reduction in industrial environments. The platform transforms existing security cameras into an always-on safety intelligence system, detecting leading indicators of injuries before they occur. With AI trained on 5+ billion hours of real-world industrial scenarios, Voxel publishes customer outcomes across cold storage, manufacturing, port operations, and logistics.
Arvist positions itself as a warehouse quality control and compliance platform, founded in 2021 with a focus on damage detection, shipment verification, and safety compliance. The platform serves companies like USI Shipping, Holmatro, and Nestlé, emphasizing claims reduction and improved shipment accuracy. Arvist's strength lies in connecting video analytics with warehouse management systems.
Lumana takes a broad enterprise security approach. Also founded in 2021, Lumana provides a comprehensive video management system (VMS+) serving diverse industries including retail, healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The platform won "Best Video Surveillance Management System" at ISC West 2026 and serves clients like Meta, Salesforce, and Union Pacific. Lumana excels at general security monitoring with features spanning threat detection to occupancy counting.
The fundamental difference lies in specialization: Arvist optimizes shipments, Lumana monitors security threats, while Voxel helps industrial teams reduce workplace injury risk.
Each platform approaches hazard detection differently based on its core mission.
Voxel's detection capabilities include:
Arvist's detection capabilities include:
Lumana's detection capabilities include:
Voxel's specialized focus on workplace-specific risks sets it apart. The platform identifies behaviors like piggybacking with forklifts, bulldozing, and walking on transport equipment not designed for pedestrians. This depth of industrial safety detection helps teams identify common leading indicators of industrial risk, including vehicle interactions, ergonomic risk, PPE gaps, blocked areas, and environmental hazards.
A practical measure of any platform is whether it can connect detections to measurable outcomes. Here's how each vendor's documented results compare.
Voxel customer results:
Arvist customer results:
Lumana customer results:
The scale and specificity of Voxel's documented safety improvements make a strong case for purpose-built detection when safety outcomes are the primary buying criterion. While other platforms deliver value in their respective domains, Voxel's results directly address the metrics EHS professionals care about most: injury rates, compliance violations, and lost-time incidents.
Administrative burden represents a hidden cost in safety management. Each platform addresses this differently.
Voxel's approach: Reduces footage review time while providing comprehensive safety documentation. The Port of Virginia reduced daily footage review from 2-3 hours to just 20-30 minutes, representing an 85% improvement in safety team productivity.
Arvist's approach: Automates claims documentation by capturing photo and video evidence of damage events, reducing time spent on OS&D (over/short/damaged) claims.
Lumana's approach: Consolidates video management across locations, reducing the need for multiple surveillance systems.
Voxel's automated incident surfacing means safety teams spend less time searching through video and more time coaching workers and implementing improvements. The platform generates reports suitable for audits, leadership reviews, and EHS meetings without manual compilation.
Compliance requirements and worker privacy concerns often determine technology adoption success, particularly in unionized environments.
Voxel's compliance approach:
Arvist's compliance approach: Focuses on shipment compliance and claims documentation with on-premise data storage options.
Lumana's compliance approach: Emphasizes enterprise video security, access control integrations, and optional biometric capabilities such as facial recognition, which may require additional privacy review in workplace environments.
Voxel's privacy-centric architecture helps address a key barrier to AI adoption in unionized and regulated workplaces. At Carlex Glass, leaders used Voxel footage for coaching and examples of both exemplary and improvable behavior, while achieving an 86% increase in safety vest compliance.
Traditional video surveillance records events for after-the-fact review. Modern AI platforms analyze footage in real-time, but the depth of analysis varies significantly.
Voxel's analytical focus:
Arvist's analytical focus: Emphasizes quality control detection for shipping operations, identifying damage and labeling errors before products leave facilities.
Lumana's analytical focus: Provides broad behavioral analytics including crowd density, loitering detection, and threat identification across diverse environments.
Voxel's computer vision goes beyond recording incidents to identifying the behavioral patterns that precede them. This shift from reactive documentation to proactive prevention aligns with Voxel's industrial safety applications, including real-time detection of risks such as PIT-person proximity, speeding, no-stops, and obstructions.
Several capabilities set Voxel apart from broader video analytics platforms.
Certified safety professional support: Voxel provides access to certified safety professionals who bring decades of expertise in safety, risk, and operational excellence. These experts help implement programs, interpret data, and drive measurable results. This transforms the platform from a detection tool into a comprehensive safety program.
Advanced ergonomic risk detection: Musculoskeletal disorders are a major workplace injury risk, especially in jobs involving lifting, bending, reaching, awkward postures, pushing, pulling, or repetitive tasks. Voxel's AI identifies improper bending, lifting, reaching, and posture issues in real-time. NSG Group achieved a 57% decrease in improper bends from Q3 to Q4 2024 using this capability.
End-to-end safety workflows: Voxel closes the loop from detection to resolution. The Actions feature assigns tasks, tracks progress, and documents corrective measures, ensuring identified risks translate into implemented improvements.
Rapid deployment: Voxel deploys to any site in 48 hours using existing camera infrastructure, requiring no specialized new camera hardware. This contrasts with implementations requiring specialized equipment installation.
Enterprise-scale proof: With documented enterprise adoption across industrial environments and customer results spanning ports, manufacturing, cold storage, retail, and logistics, Voxel has proven scalability across complex operations.
The ultimate measure of workplace safety technology extends beyond detection accuracy to cultural impact.
Voxel enables:
Arvist enables: Quality-focused operational improvements and claims documentation.
Lumana enables: Comprehensive security monitoring with unified video management.
Voxel's approach treats safety technology as a foundation for culture change rather than a surveillance tool. This philosophy drives adoption in environments where workers might otherwise resist monitoring technology.
For EHS professionals and operations teams at warehouses, manufacturing plants, distribution centers, and ports, the choice becomes clear when evaluating primary objectives.
Choose Voxel when you need:
Arvist serves organizations prioritizing warehouse quality control and shipment verification. Lumana serves organizations needing comprehensive enterprise security across diverse facility types. But for industrial operations focused specifically on preventing workplace injuries and building sustainable safety culture, Voxel is purpose-built for the job.
The combination of specialized detection capabilities, expert safety consultation, privacy-first architecture, and documented enterprise results creates compelling value that general-purpose platforms are typically not designed to match for safety-focused organizations.
Voxel implements multiple privacy protections including worker body blurring by default, no facial recognition or employee identification capabilities, and adjustable video availability controls. The platform maintains SOC 2 Type II audited controls with end-to-end encryption using TLS 1.2 in transit and AES-256 at rest. Role-based access controls can be configured at location and camera levels, ensuring only authorized personnel view relevant footage. This privacy-centric design makes Voxel a stronger choice for unionized and regulated workplaces where trust, transparency, and non-punitive safety improvement are essential.
No, Voxel integrates with existing security camera infrastructure, requiring no new camera hardware. The platform connects to cameras already installed at industrial facilities and goes live within 48 hours of installation. This approach transforms existing security infrastructure into an active safety intelligence system while minimizing operational disruption compared to solutions requiring specialized hardware installation.
Voxel deploys to any site in 48 hours using existing camera infrastructure. The platform employs hardened cloud infrastructure with secure multi-tenant architecture, enabling quick onboarding while maintaining enterprise-grade security standards. For industrial teams that need faster time to value, Voxel's rapid deployment model is a meaningful advantage.
Documented results across Voxel's enterprise client base include Americold achieving 77% injury reduction with $1.1M annual EBITDA savings, NSG Group reducing safety vest incidents by 62% in 30 days and expanding from one pilot to over 20 global facilities, Piston Automotive achieving 86% reduction in vehicle safety incidents, and Port of Virginia reducing truck speeding by 50% while improving safety team efficiency by 85%. These results demonstrate measurable impact through both injury reduction and operational efficiency gains.
Yes, Voxel has successfully deployed in unionized environments including facilities with United Auto Workers (UAW) representation. The platform's privacy-first approach with no facial recognition, worker body blurring, and emphasis on non-punitive safety culture enables adoption where surveillance technology can face additional review. At Carlex Glass, management collaborated with the UAW to ensure Voxel was used for information gathering and training, and managers used Voxel footage for coaching conversations rather than punitive enforcement. This makes Voxel the superior choice for industrial organizations that need AI safety intelligence without compromising worker trust.