Stereoscopic library Development history of
The stereoscopic warehouse, also known as elevated warehouse or elevated warehouse, generally refers to a warehouse that uses several, ten or even dozens of layers of shelves to store goods in the unit, and uses corresponding material handling equipment to carry out goods warehousing and outbound operations.
The emergence and development of stereoscopic warehouses is the result of production and skill development after the Second World War. In the early 1950s, the United States appeared a three-dimensional warehouse using bridge stacker cranes; At the end of the 1950s and the beginning of the 1960s, there was a three-dimensional warehouse of roadway stacking crane operated by drivers; In 1963, the United States took the lead in selecting computer control skills in elevated warehouses, and established the first computer controlled three-dimensional warehouse. Later, Automatic stereo library Housing has been rapidly developed in the United States and Europe, and has formed a specialized discipline. In the mid-1960s, Japan began to build stereoscopic warehouses, and the pace of development is getting faster and faster, becoming one of the countries with more automated stereoscopic warehouses in the world today. The development of three-dimensional warehouse and its material handling equipment in China is not late. In 1963, the first bridge stacker crane was developed (Beijing Lifting and Transportation Machinery Research Institute of Ministry of Machinery). In 1973, the first computer controlled automated three-dimensional warehouse (15m high, served by the Lifting Institute of Ministry of Machinery) was developed. The system was put into operation in 1980. Up to now (2009), the number of automated three-dimensional warehouses in China has exceeded 1200. Because of its high space utilization rate, strong inbound and outbound capacity, and the use of computers to control processing, three-dimensional warehouses have become an indispensable warehousing skill for enterprise logistics and production processing, and are increasingly valued by enterprises.