Mezzanine shelving features:
Typically, medium-duty shelving or heavy-duty beam shelving is used as the main structure, with forklifts or hydraulic lift platforms for loading and unloading goods between floors. Multi-level mezzanine racking maximizes warehouse space. The mezzanine shelving takes into account humanized logistics, featuring an aesthetically pleasing design and a spacious structure. Easy to install and dismantle, it can be flexibly designed on-site, suitable for storing various types of items.
The attic shelving system features an assembled structure, eliminating the need for on-site welding, offering an overall aesthetic and generous appearance. Compared to concrete or steel frame structures, the attic shelves inherently support the upper floors, providing advantages such as lower costs and higher space utilization rates.
Rack panels for attic storage come in flat, patterned steel, and perforated steel varieties to meet different requirements such as fire resistance, ventilation, and lighting. Goods can be transported between floors using forklifts, hydraulic lifting platforms, or elevators; while intra-floor transportation is typically completed with small hand trucks.
Mezzanine shelving typically supports 300KG to 1000KG per square meter, with columns made of round tubes for their strong load-bearing capacity and minimal steel usage; the main and secondary beams can be selected based on load requirements.
Mezzanine shelves are widely used in high-ceiling warehouses with small goods, manual handling, and large storage capacities, effectively maximizing space and saving storage area. They can be designed as single or multi-layer mezzanines, typically 2-3 layers, based on the actual site and specific requirements. Suitable for the classification and storage of series products for companies in the automotive and electronic components industries, with a load capacity of ≤500kg per layer.
































