Archive Room Design Guide

Archive Room Layout Planning Guide

Archive room layout planning determines storage capacity, retrieval efficiency, safety and future expansion before shelving is purchased or installed. Room dimensions, document format, floor loading, aisle width, security and archive growth should be planned as one complete system.

Capacity Calculation
Aisle Planning
Floor Loading
Archive Zoning
Archive room layout planning with mobile shelving, operating aisles and document storage zones

Plan the room before selecting the shelving system
Capacity, access, safety and future growth should be calculated before production begins.
CapacityConvert archive quantity into linear shelf length
AccessSeparate active, inactive and confidential records
SafetyReview floor loading, fire equipment and evacuation
GrowthReserve space according to retention and annual increase

Required Project Information

Archive room layout planning starts with accurate room and archive data

Measurements, building services and archive quantity should be confirmed before capacity or shelving layout is calculated.

ROOM

Room dimensions

Length, width, clear height, doors, windows, columns, wall recesses and floor-level changes.

BUILDING

Building services

Lighting, sprinklers, detectors, air outlets, electrical panels, pipes and emergency exits.

ARCHIVE

Archive information

Document type, current shelf length, annual growth, retention period, users and confidentiality.

Step 1 — Capacity Calculation

Convert documents into required shelf length and reserve capacity

Archive room layout planning should use linear shelf length rather than only counting boxes or folders.

The calculation should include current documents, unsorted files, annual growth, retention period and reserve capacity.

Current archive quantityMeasure occupied shelf length, archive-box width, binder thickness and unprocessed records.
Annual growthEstimate yearly additions, departmental expansion and transferred records.
Retention periodSeparate permanent, long-term, temporary and disposal-ready records.
Active vs inactive filesKeep frequently used records near work areas and inactive files in dense storage.

Step 2 — Storage System Selection

Choose fixed, manual, electric, smart or mixed storage

Different archive zones may require different storage systems, access methods and security levels.

Fixed Shelving

Direct access for active files

Suitable for frequently used records, small rooms, receiving zones and open-access storage.

  • Permanent access aisles
  • Simple installation
  • Best for active records
  • Lower storage density

Manual Mobile

Simple high-density storage

Mechanical handwheel movement provides capacity without motors or software.

  • Lower control-system cost
  • No power supply required
  • Low or moderate retrieval
  • Simple maintenance

View Manual Mobile Shelving →

Electric Mobile

Motorized daily access

Electric movement reduces staff effort and supports sensors, emergency controls and lighting.

  • Suitable for long rows
  • Frequent archive retrieval
  • Sensor-based safety
  • Balanced operation and cost

View Electric Mobile Shelving →

Smart Mobile

Controlled digital archives

Smart shelving adds user permissions, operation records, RFID and central management.

  • User-based access
  • Operation history
  • RFID integration
  • Environmental monitoring

View Smart Mobile Shelving →

Step 3 — Shelving Arrangement

Plan shelving blocks according to retrieval and room geometry

Maximum Density

Single mobile block

One large block can maximize capacity when retrieval is controlled and the room is regular.

Multiple Users

Several shelving blocks

Shorter blocks allow faster access, department zoning and simultaneous retrieval.

Active Records

Fixed end rows

Frequently used records can remain at the ends of a mobile shelving block.

Irregular Walls

Wall-based shelving

Shallow fixed shelving can use wall areas around columns, recesses and doors.

Steps 4–5 — Aisles and Dimensions

Balance capacity with daily retrieval and document size

Aisle planning

Main access aisle for staff, archive carts and emergency movement
Operating aisle sized for document handling and local requirements
Secondary aisles around columns, equipment and different zones
Clear access to exits, panels, fire equipment and maintenance points

Shelving dimensions

Shelf depth matched to boxes, binders, folders or books
Shelf spacing adjusted to minimize unused vertical clearance
Shelving height checked against reach, lighting and sprinkler clearance
Row length balanced against moving weight and retrieval distance

Steps 6–8 — Structure, Safety and Environment

Archive room layout planning must protect the building and stored records

Floor loading, fire equipment, emergency access, lighting, air circulation and environmental conditions should be reviewed before installation.

Floor loadingConfirm slab capacity, levelness, beams, joints, embedded pipes and track fixing positions.
Emergency accessKeep exits, extinguishers, alarm panels and maintenance points unobstructed.
Lighting and visibilityProvide clear lighting for labels, inventory work and safe retrieval.
Archive environmentMaintain air circulation, avoid water sources and allow sensor access.

Step 9 — Archive Zoning

Create clear zones for receiving, work, storage and disposal

Receiving Zone

Newly received files, temporary storage, inspection, registration and labeling.

Sorting and Work Zone

Worktables, computers, barcode equipment, archive carts and label printers.

Active Records Zone

Frequently accessed files positioned near the entrance or work area.

High-Density Zone

Inactive records, archive boxes and long-term document retention.

Confidential Zone

Locked cabinets, restricted rows, card access and user permissions.

Disposal Zone

Records awaiting review, approval, destruction or transfer.

Typical Layout Models

Archive room layout planning by room size and organizational structure

SMALL ROOM

One compact storage block

Manual mobile shelving, fixed active-file shelving, one worktable and mechanical locks.

MEDIUM ROOM

Two coordinated storage blocks

Mobile shelving, fixed active files, receiving area and confidential cabinets.

LARGE CENTER

Multiple controlled archive zones

Several shelving blocks, multiple aisles, RFID, processing areas and central control.

MIXED DEPARTMENTS

Department-based zoning

Finance, HR, legal, contracts and technical records use separate locks and retention rules.

Planning Checklist

Confirm room, archive, storage and project requirements

Room and building

Room dimensions, doors, windows and columns
Floor levelness and structural loading
Fire equipment, lighting and air-conditioning
Electrical panels and emergency exits

Archive and project

Document format, current quantity and shelf length
Annual growth, retention and disposal schedule
Users, retrieval frequency and confidentiality
Operating method, color, locks and installation scope

Common Planning Mistakes

Avoid layout decisions that reduce capacity or create operational problems

01

Selecting shelving before calculating capacity

Archive quantity and shelf length should be calculated before choosing equipment.

02

Ignoring future growth

A room designed only for current files may become full soon after installation.

03

Using one shelf depth everywhere

Different archive formats often require different shelf depths.

04

Creating too many permanent aisles

Excessive aisles consume floor area that could be used for shelving.

05

Ignoring floor loading

High-density storage creates concentrated structural loads.

06

Leaving no work area

Receiving, sorting, labeling and document handling require dedicated space.

Typical Technical Reference

Preliminary dimensions for archive shelving layout planning

Final dimensions and loading depend on the room, stored materials, selected shelving system and approved layout.

Main material
Cold-rolled steel with powder-coated surface
Storage system
Fixed, manual mobile, electric mobile or smart mobile shelving
Typical shelving height
Approximately 1,800–2,500 mm
Typical bay width
Approximately 800–1,000 mm
Typical shelf depth
Approximately 250–600 mm
Shelf levels
Commonly 5–8 adjustable levels
Shelf loading
Approximately 40–100 kg per shelf
Steel thickness
Commonly 0.6–1.5 mm depending on component
Operating aisle
Confirmed according to document size, carts and workflow
Safety options
Anti-tilt, braking, emergency stop and sensor protection
Installation
Project-based installation, adjustment and testing

External reference: ISO 11799:2024 — document storage requirements for archive and library materials.

These values are general references only. Final specifications should be confirmed after reviewing the room plan, archive quantity, document format and project requirements.

Archive Room Layout Planning Workflow

From project information to installation and handover

Receive project data

Review the room plan, archive quantity, document dimensions and growth.

Calculate capacity

Convert records into shelf length, bays, rows and reserve capacity.

Mark constraints

Identify doors, columns, fire equipment, lighting and exits.

Select the system

Compare fixed, manual, electric, smart and mixed storage.

Develop the layout

Plan shelving blocks, aisles, work zones and confidential areas.

Review structure

Check floor loading, safety, environment and building services.

Confirm specifications

Approve dimensions, loading, tracks, controls, locks and colors.

Install and test

Produce, install, adjust and test the approved archive system.

Frequently Asked Questions

Archive room layout planning FAQ

What information is required for archive room layout planning?

Provide room dimensions, a floor plan, archive quantity, document format, annual growth, retrieval frequency, number of users and security requirements.

How is archive capacity calculated?

Archive quantity is converted into linear shelf length, shelf levels, bays, rows and reserve capacity.

Which shelving system provides the highest density?

Mobile shelving generally provides higher density because it reduces permanent aisles.

Should active records be stored in mobile shelving?

They can be, but frequently used records are often more practical near the entrance or in fixed shelving.

How wide should the operating aisle be?

The width depends on document dimensions, retrieval method, archive carts, users and local safety requirements.

Does the floor structure need to be checked?

Yes. High-density storage creates concentrated loads and should be reviewed before installation.

Can fixed and mobile shelving be combined?

Yes. Mixed layouts are common and often improve archive workflow.

How much future capacity should be reserved?

Reserve capacity should reflect annual growth, retention periods and disposal schedules.

Can confidential archives use separate access control?

Yes. Separate rooms, locked rows, card access, passwords and user permissions can be configured.

Can SAS prepare a preliminary layout?

Yes. Send the room plan and archive information for a preliminary archive room layout proposal.

Related SAS Pages

Continue planning your archive storage system

Archive Room Planning

Plan Your Archive Room Before Purchasing Shelving

For an archive room layout planning proposal, send SAS the room dimensions, floor plan, archive quantity, box dimensions, annual growth, retrieval frequency and confidentiality requirements. We will evaluate storage capacity, shelving arrangement, aisle width, floor loading, safety and future expansion.

Share your archive-room information and SAS will prepare a suitable preliminary layout.