Right arrow Texture Behaviour Where People and Trucks Share Space

Surface Texture Control in Mixed Handling Areas

Mixed handling zones include pick support, packing, short transfers, staging and dispatch interfaces where people, trolleys and trucks share the same strips. Surface texture controls how quickly a thin film spreads, how debris is held, and whether braking and turning feel consistent. This article supports our wider distribution centre flooring guidance by focusing on texture behaviour rather than surface appearance.

20 +

Years
Supporting Distribution Floors

The aim is consistent behaviour across shared strips, so operators do not experience sudden changes in grip, braking response or cleaning outcomes. In mixed zones, small texture differences can create tracking lines, residue patches and predictable slip risks that repeat shift after shift unless the control points are addressed.

Right arrow How Texture Controls Grip, Tracking and Cleanability

Mixed handling areas combine foot traffic, trolleys and MHE on the same strips, so texture controls both grip and cleaning outcomes. If turning arcs become too smooth, thin films track and braking response changes in short, repeat patches. If the surface becomes too open, fines lodge in the texture and cleaning pushes residue into boundary lines that reappear each shift. The aim is consistent behaviour across transitions, so people and vehicles do not encounter sudden changes at crossings, merges and pack line approaches.

On new builds, texture can be set during concrete slab installation. Existing floors are often corrected using resurfacing. In inspection corridors, polished concrete can help reveal early tracking and pattern change.

Right arrow Texture Drivers in Shared Handling Zones

  • Turn arcs that polish quickly where trucks repeatedly realign near pack lines.
  • Pedestrian crossings where fine debris collects and gets carried into pick lanes.
  • Short braking strips at merges that feel different once a thin film forms.
  • Trolley routes that leave narrow tracking lines during wet or dusty periods.
  • Cleaning patterns that redistribute residue into the same boundary strips.

Right arrow Where Texture Problems Commonly Develop

Texture issues show up where people and trucks share strips and repeatedly cross between zones. Small changes become repeat events: tracking lines, polished arcs, residue patches and debris traps. These areas matter because they influence grip, stopping response and cleaning time across the wider operation.

Pack line approaches where slow turns polish arcs and widen monthly.

Pedestrian crossings where debris builds and transfers into adjacent lanes.

Merge points where short braking strips create repeat film tracking.

Staging pockets where pallet set-down leaves fines lodged in texture.

Dispatch walkways where tyre marks spread residue into foot routes.

Cleaning start points where residue is pushed into boundary strips repeatedly.

Right arrow Our Approach

How We Control Texture in Shared Handling Zones

STAGE 1

Mapping Shared Strips and Behaviour Changes

We map where pedestrians, trolleys and trucks share the same floor strips, including crossings, merges, pack line approaches and staging pockets. We then identify the behaviour changes that matter: steering correction, braking response, tracking lines and locations where cleaning effort increases. This defines the control strips where texture has the biggest operational effect.

Double arrowsSTAGE 2

Assessing Texture Condition, Deposits and Repeat Tracking

We assess whether the surface is becoming too smooth in turn arcs and braking strips, or too open where debris lodges and persists. Deposit lines after cleaning are reviewed because they show where the floor is holding residue and where traffic is redistributing it. Findings are linked back to the shared strip map so the mechanism is clear.

Double arrowsSTAGE 3

Targeting Corrections and Verifying Under Routine Use

Measures focus on restoring predictable behaviour in the control strips, so grip, tracking and cleaning response remain consistent across the zone. Works are phased around live routes, with checks after reopening under normal traffic and a normal cleaning cycle. The goal is that tracking lines reduce and the same residue patches do not reappear in the same locations.

Keeping Transitions Predictable Under Foot Traffic

People notice small changes in grip quickly, especially where they step from a dry strip into a tracked film line. Managing texture at crossings and boundaries supports safer movement and reduces the chance of repeated slip-prone patches forming in the same places.

Reducing Polished Arcs Near Pack and Sortation

Polished arcs usually indicate repeat turning and alignment. If these arcs widen, braking and steering correction can change across the zone. Where the pattern is already established, see wear patterns in pick and dispatch zones.

Managing Texture Where Mixed Trucks Share Strips

Reach trucks, forklifts and VNA equipment can create different tracking and polish behaviour on the same strip. Where mixed traffic is driving inconsistent response, refer to traffic effects on distribution centre floors.

Avoiding Texture Changes That Trigger Joint Vibration

If a tracked strip crosses a joint, surface change can combine with edge behaviour and create repeat vibration points. Where joints are already controlling route feel, see joint performance in continuous picking centres.

Discuss Texture Control in Mixed Handling Areas

If tracking lines, polished arcs or residue patches are affecting shared routes, we can review which strips are controlling behaviour and how to stabilise performance without disrupting operations.

Contact us to discuss your distribution centre flooring requirements:

Right arrow FAQ

Surface Texture Common Questions

Why do mixed handling areas develop tracking lines so quickly?
Shared strips combine foot traffic with truck wheels, so small films and fine debris are moved repeatedly along the same routes. Once a line forms, each pass reinforces it and cleaning often pushes residue into the same boundary. Because the behaviour repeats across shifts, a minor line becomes a persistent operational feature.
What happens when the surface becomes too smooth in turn arcs?
When turn arcs polish, braking and steering response can change in a predictable patch that trucks encounter repeatedly. Thin films spread more easily, and stopping distances can increase in short strips near merges. Operators often compensate by adjusting speed and line, which widens the affected area and can increase stress at nearby joints.
Why can a rougher surface make cleaning harder in packing zones?
A more open texture can hold fine debris and residues, especially where carton dust and pallet fines are present. Cleaning then becomes slower because material is lodged in the surface rather than sitting on top. If the residue is redistributed rather than removed, it reappears as repeat lines that affect both wheels and footwear.
How do we identify the control strips for texture correction?
Control strips are the routes where behaviour repeats and changes are noticed first: crossings, merges, pack line approaches and short braking sections. Tracking lines after cleaning and polished arcs are useful indicators because they show where the floor is controlling movement. Focusing on these strips is usually more effective than treating large areas without a behavioural map.
Can texture issues be reduced without changing operations or kit?
In many centres, yes, because the key is stabilising the shared strips where patterns form. If the surface is corrected and small traps that hold residue are reduced, tracking lines develop more slowly and cleaning becomes more consistent. The practical test is whether the same lines reappear after a normal shift and a normal cleaning cycle.
When do texture problems indicate a joint or level issue underneath?
If tracking lines align with a joint, or a “smooth patch” coincides with vibration and debris collecting along an edge, the surface behaviour may be linked to joint response or local level change. In these cases, texture correction alone can be short-lived. Reviewing joints and transitions alongside texture helps target the real control point causing repeat behaviour.