Mezzanine shelving features:
Typically, medium-duty rack shelves or heavy-duty beam racks are used as the main structure, with forklifts or hydraulic lifting platforms for loading and unloading goods between floors. Multi-tiered shelving optimizes warehouse space. Mezzanine racks are designed with humanized logistics in mind, featuring attractive aesthetics and a spacious structure. They are easy to install and disassemble, allowing for flexible on-site design and are suitable for storing a variety of items.
The mezzanine shelving is a modular structure, requiring no on-site welding, and boasts an overall aesthetic and elegance. Compared to concrete or steel frame structures, the shelving on the ground floor itself serves as support for the upper floors, offering advantages such as lower costs and higher space utilization.
Mezzanine racking panels are available in flat steel, patterned steel, perforated steel, etc., to meet various requirements such as fire resistance, ventilation, lighting, and more. Goods can be transported between floors using forklifts, hydraulic lifting platforms, or elevators; typically, small hand trucks are used for intra-floor transportation.
Mezzanine shelves typically have a load-bearing capacity of 300KG~1000KG per square meter, with round tubes chosen for columns due to their high load-bearing strength and low steel consumption; the primary and secondary beams can be selected according to the load requirements.
Mezzanine shelves are widely used in situations where the warehouse is high, goods are small, manual handling is required, and storage volume is large, enabling full utilization of space and saving warehouse area. They can be designed as single or multi-layer mezzanines, typically 2-3 layers, based on actual site conditions and specific requirements. Suitable for categorizing and storing a series of products for companies in the automotive parts and electronic components industries, with a load-bearing capacity of ≤500kg per layer.






