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Unifrost Commercial refrigeration knowledge hub for Irish businesses
FAQ

How should I lay out a Unifrost upright freezer for hotel banqueting to enhance staff efficiency?

FAQ
Quick answer

Treat the upright as a pick cabinet, not a deep store.

Support note

This FAQ is designed for a fast answer first. Use the related guide links if you need the fuller decision path behind the short version.

Treat the upright as a pick cabinet, not a deep store.

Put a landing zone beside it: a clear stainless bench or trolley space so staff can open once, pull multiple items, close, then portion or plate without holding the door open.

Build a simple shelf map (top to bottom):

Top shelves: fastest-pick items for the next 30 to 90 minutes of service (pre-portioned desserts, ice, garnish components).

Middle shelves: core banqueting items you pick repeatedly (starters components, plated veg portions, backup bread rolls).

Bottom: heavy or bulky items and “do not pick in service” overflow.

Allocate by function, not by product type: e.g. one clearly labelled section for Banqueting Tonight, one for Breakfast Backup, one for Bar/Events, and one for Overflow/Week Stock.

Standardise packaging: use the same GN size or box format per shelf so staff can grab by muscle memory.

Mirror the layout across multiple uprights: if you run more than one Unifrost upright (for example F410SS plus a larger cabinet such as F1000SV or F1300SV), keep the same shelf numbering and labels so agency staff can work quickly.

Read the full guide: Workflow Planning Guide for Unifrost Upright Freezers and DCF Deli Counters in Irish Hotel Kitchens.

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