Zume is shutting down its Seattle engineering office amid widespread layoffs at the pizza making robotics company.

The Bay Area-based startup is laying off 360 employees, or about 50 percent of its workforce, as it pivots away from automated cooking to food packaging, CNBC reported.

As part of the cuts, 78 employees will be let go from the downtown Seattle office, according to a new WARN notice filed Thursday with the state of Washington. The notice indicates that the layoffs begin March 13.

Business Insider reported about the Seattle office closure earlier this week.

There are more than 130 companies that have engineering centers in the Seattle region as a way to tap into the area’s rich talent pool buoyed by local tech giants Amazon and Microsoft.

Zume was valued at nearly $2 billion in November, per Recode, and raised a $375 million round from SoftBank in 2018. Several executives have left in recent months.

The company will create 100 new roles in its “Source Packaging” unit as part of the restructuring.

So what does this mean for the other robotic food makers such as Seattle startup Picnic, which showed off its pizza making robot at CES this week?

Picnic CEO Clayton Wood told GeekWire: “Totally different companies in totally different markets.”

Picnic has raised less than $10 million. Its customers include Centerplate, which provides food at stadiums and other large venues.

Here’s an email sent to employees by Zume CEO and founder Alex Garden, as shared by a company spokesperson.