By Preetika Rana

DoorDash Inc. is acquiring robotics startup Chowbotics, according to people familiar with the deal, signaling a growing appetite to automate food production when ordering in is at an all-time high.

The companies aren't planning to disclose the terms of the deal, one of the people said.

Chowbotics' technology can whip up salads and poke bowls, among other things, and DoorDash is exploring how to deploy it across restaurants, one of the people said. Some of the ideas include using the technology to help restaurants expand their menu -- such as enabling a pizzeria to offer salads, for example -- or letting a salad bar open new locations -- a kiosk at an airport, for instance -- without additional manpower.

While automating food production could shave off time and costs for restaurants, it's unclear how amenable potential diners are to these technologies.

Uber Technologies Inc. invested in building delivery drones for its Eats business, but dialed back those ambitions amid a broad restructuring last year.

Food delivery has grown at a blistering pace during the coronavirus pandemic. DoorDash CEO Tony Xu said in a December interview that the company became more operationally efficient during the health crisis, resulting in faster deliveries. The San Francisco-based company controlled almost half of the U.S. food-delivery market as of mid-October, up from one-third the year earlier, giving it a lead over Uber Eats, Grubhub Inc. and other rivals.

Food-delivery companies have expanded their offerings during the lockdown. Uber agreed to buy alcohol-delivery service Drizly for $1.1 billion last week. Both Uber and DoorDash made forays into grocery-delivery last year.

The health crisis also pushed the money-losing industry to consolidate. Grubhub agreed to merge with the U.K.'s Just Eat Takeaway last year while Uber acquired Postmates Inc.

Founded in 2014, Hayward, Calif.-based Chowbotics' signature robot, called Sally, has 22 compartments which can be used to stock greens, vegetables, fruits, nuts and more. Customers order at a touch screen that provides real-time nutrition information as they build their meals. The company's website says Sally has been used to craft to-meals ranging from brisket bowls to salads and yogurt bowls.

--Rob Copeland contributed to this article.

Write to Preetika Rana at preetika.rana@wsj.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

02-08-21 1245ET