Archive Box Storage
Archives
Case Studies
London Metropolitan Archives Case StudyMeridian Broadcasting Case Study
RAF Museum Case Study
Science Museum Archive and Library Case Study
Linklaters Case Study
Hill Dickinson Case Study
CGNU Insurance Group Case Study
Deepstore Case Study
Farrer & Co Case Study
Gaydon Motor Museum Case Study
CAA Safety Regulations Group Case Study
|
|
|
A popular solution for Archive Box Storage is Mobile Shelving. Effective storage systems are designed to provide efficient storage and retrieval. Link 51 Mobile Shelving system gives excellent accessibility , whilst maximising the avaiable floor space for storage. Mobile shelving is effective in saving space by eliminating the need for several access aisles. The shelving moves along floor tracks so the space for only one aisle is needed. The highest ever Link 51 mobile shelving system – providing a remarkable 4.2km of storage space – is now fully operational at the new Hill Dickinson archive facility in Liverpool. The installation, which effectively creates a solid ‘block’ of shelving locations that requires only individual access aisles to be open as required, measures no less than seven metres in height. It can contain 16,000 individual storage boxes yet requires only a sixth of the floor space of the equivalent storage in a static facility. The installation provides a new central focus which replaces a number of separate satellite storage units with Hill Dickinson enjoying a reduction in file retrieval costs as a direct result. The Link 51 design is centred on a series of back-to-back shelving bays mounted on bases that run on parallel rails set into the floor. Each base can accommodate up to 22 tonnes yet can be easily moved laterally with the use of a lightweight, ergonomically designed hand wheel. Each hand wheel operation easily opens an individual aisle – exactly where required – to provide access for a mobile picking platform. This ability to vary the point of access allows the majority of the installation to be kept in a ‘closed’ configuration which, in turn, minimises the overall footprint required, helping to maximise storage space efficiency. As well as saving space, mobile systems are ideal for sensitive or expensive items that are stored because the systems can be closed up or locked to restrict access. |
|








