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    Planning of cold storage

    A cold store essentially consists of a number of refrigerated chambers which are able to chill, freeze and store any perishableproduct. Certain general substructural conditions must be fulfilled to construct a cold store successfully: site selection for easyaccess by road and train; terrain of good mechanical resistance and without problems of surface water; good supply of potable andindustrial water and electricity; drainage facilities. As well, the local availability of labour (technical personnel, skilled labour formaintenance and general labourers) should be investigated.

    Although a cold store is essentially an area where products are preserved, plus a site for the machinery room, it is obvious thatcomplementary spaces are necessary: office, laboratory, public services, toilets and cloakroom, spare parts room and workshop,and packaging material storage.

    Some other services may be found annexed to a cold store, such as cutting and deboning, salting, meat products manufacture,packaging, and a sales office.

    Before planning a cold store it is important to define operational and technical specifications. These are strictly dependent onproducts, stores, storage conditions, environment, energy and personnel. The publication Guide to a refrigerated store(IIR, 1976)includes an exhaustive checklist worthy of use at this planning stage.

    GENERAL ARRANGEMENTS

    The general features of a cold store operational programme (products, chilling and chilled storage, freezing and frozen storage,cutting, deboning and packaging, stocks, daily movements) include total capacity, number and size of rooms, refrigeration system,storage and handling equipment and access facilities.

    The relative positioning of the different parts will condition the refrigeration system chosen. The site of the cold chambers should bedecided once the sizes are known, but as a general rule they should be in the shade of direct sunlight.

    The land area must be large enough for the store, its annexes and areas for traffic, parking and possible future enlargement. A landarea about six to ten times the area of the covered surface will suffice.

    There is a general trend to construct single-storey cold stores, in spite of the relatively high surface: volume ratio influencing heatlosses. The single storey has many advantages: lighter construction; span and pillar height can be increased; building on lowerresistance soils is possible; internal mechanical transport is easier. Mechanical handling with forklift trucks allows the building ofstores of great height, reducing the costs of construction for a given total volume.

    The greater the height of the chambers the better, limited only by the mechanical means of stacking and by the mechanicalresistance either of the packaging material or of the unpackaged merchandise. In fact chilled meat carcasses, which cannot bestacked, limit the height of the chamber as they are hung from rails (see Figures 1 and 3). Chilled quarters and cuts can bemechanically handled for storage without stacking (see Figures 2 and 4).

    The length and width of the chambers are determined by the total amount of merchandise to be handled, how it is handled (hangingfrom rails, forklift trucks), the number of chambers and the dimensions of basic handling elements.

    FIGURE 3Storage of carcasses on hooks

    There is no advantage in building many chambers of a small size, particularly for meat products. Thermal and hygrometric

    requirements are not so strict as to justify a lot of rooms: the accuracy of the measuring instruments and the regulation of conditionsinside the chamber always produce higher deviations than those of ideal storage conditions for different products. This isparticularly true for frozen products.

    Chilled meats of different species (beef, pork or mutton) can be stored in the same room as they do not present temperature or

    Produced by: Agriculture and Consumer Protection

    Title: Manual on meat cold store operation and management...

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    tainting incompatibilities. Frozen meats have even less problems. Stores for refrigerated products are usually more divided andoften of lower height than those for frozen goods.

    A design that opts for fewer, larger chambers represents in the first place an economy in construction costs as many divisionalwalls and doors are eliminated. Refrigeration and control equipment is simplified and reduced, affecting investment and runningcosts. Large chambers allow easier control of temperature and relative humidity and also better use of storage space. Only in veryparticular situations should the cold store be designed with more than five or six cold chambers.

    FIGURE 4Stacking in racks

    Store capacity is the total amount of produce to be stored. If the total volume of the chambers is filled, the quantity of produce byunit of volume will express storage density.

    Several parameters must be defined within a cold store. The total volume is the space comprised within the floor, roof and walls ofthe building. The gross volume is the total volume in which produce can be stored, that is excluding other spaces not for storage.The net volume represents the space where produce is stacked, excluding those spaces occupied by pillars, coolers, ducts, aircirculation and traffic passages inside the chambers that are included in the gross volume. Storage density referred to as netvolume is expressed in kg/useful m3, but is most commonly referred to as gross volume.

    An index of how reasonably and economically the cold store has been designed is the gross volume divided by the total volume. Itmust be in the range of 0.50 to 0.80.

    Similarly gross volume is about 50 percent greater than net volume, and gross area (same concept as volume) is about 25 percentgreater than net area.

    The extent of occupation is the ratio between the actual quantity of produce in storage at a given moment and that which can bestored. Equally the extent of utilization is the average of the extent of occupation during a given period usually a year, but it canalso be per month.

    MANAGEMENT

    The operation of cold rooms must take into account the storage requirements of the produce, rules for loading, maintenance andhygiene, and the running and maintenance of the refrigeration equipment.

    The loading plan will depend on the type of cold chamber, whether it is for preliminary chilling, for chilled storage or frozen storage.

    Preliminary chilling, which is done in the slaughterhouse itself, depends on the slaughtering rate as this determines the amount ofmeat to be chilled hourly. To avoid keeping the store door continuously open, freshly killed warm carcasses are separated into lots

    and introduced into the chilling chamber every half hour, for instance.

    Carcass movement inside the store should be designed in such a way that warm and wet meat faces the air from already chilledcarcasses.

    Overhead rails must be placed so carcasses are oriented in the sense of air circulation, and to prevent them from touching eachother.

    It is sometimes advisable to divide the total chilling capacity among a few chambers, computed on two hours' slaughtering, whenthe capacity is high enough (1040 t/day). Another option for high slaughtering capacity (over 40 t/day) is the continuous chillingsystem, where carcasses pass through a chilling tunnel transported by a mechanical conveyor for two to four hours and are thenput in a cold chamber to undergo final chilling.

    Chilling facilities should be systematically emptied after chilling and before preparing for the following day's production.

    Already chilled carcasses are placed in a refrigerated store. The storage rooms should be at least equal in capacity to the chillingrooms.

    If fresh meats are intended for quick distribution they should not leave the chilling facilities until the temperature of the warmestpoint is below 7C, meaning an average temperature of about 2C.

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    The storage density of carcasses on hooks is dependent on the spacing of the rails, the height of suspension and the size of thecarcasses, and very little on the unit weight of the carcasses. Figures 3 and 4 show details of carcass disposition and loading plans.Tables 3 and 4 give some data on storage densities.

    Meat is frozen in full carcasses, or in halves for small and medium-size animals and in quarters for large animals. The disposition ofmeat in a freezing chamber or tunnel is similar to that in the chilling operation. However, frozen meat is not stored hanging fromrails but loose on the floor, on racked pallets or in boxes when it is cut up and/or deboned.

    Figure 5 gives a diagram for loading on pallets for long-term frozen storage and the correct system for loading. Table 4 gives someuseful data on stacking densities for frozen meat.

    TABLE 3. Density of storage of hanging carcasses

    From: FAO Agricultural Services Bulletin 19/2, Rome, FAO, 1984.

    TABLE 4. Density of storage of meat products

    BEEF. Weight: 300 to 400 kg

    - in half-carcasses hanging from a high-level rail

    Height of rail from ground 3.80 to 4.00 m

    Point of hook 3.00 to 3.40 m

    perpendicular to the track 450 to 600 kg/m

    (3 half-carcasses per linear m, separation of tracks) 1.00 m (minimum)

    parallel to the track (2 carcasses on the same track) 430 to 500 kg/m

    separation of tracks 0.90 m (minimum)

    - in quarters, height of rail 2.60 to 3.00 m

    Point of hook 1.90 m above ground

    perpendicular to the track:

    - 4 quarters rear 400 kg/m

    - 4 quarters front 3.00

    separation of tracks 1.00 m

    parallel to the track mean of 200 to

    250 kg

    HORSE

    parallel to the track 435 kg/m

    separation of tracks 1.00 m

    VEAL. Weight: 45 to 80 kg

    - hung on 4-toothed, with extension, or 3 veal by the tibia

    2 to 3 veal per truck 135 to 240 kg/m

    separation of tracks 0.90 to 1.00 m (min)

    - hung bar with hooks

    1 to each 2 hooks 70 to 120 kg/m

    number of hooks 3/m

    MUTTON (or lamb). Weight: 15 to 30 kg

    - on extension (4 mutton 15 to 20 kg in a circle of 0.70 m) 85 to 115 kg/m

    - on hangers (3 to linear m) 45 to 90 kg/m

    - in groups of 8 superimposed carcasses 290 to 400 kg/m

    separation of rails 0.80 m

    - on special aerial chassis with 10 hooks

    (10 carcasses/linear m) 150 to 300 kg/m

    separation between bars 1.40 to 2.00 m

    bars with double hangers 0.50 m

    bars in relation to the wall 0.50 m

    bars grouped in lots for the despatch hall 0.50 m

    PORK. Weight: 80 kg

    - on a runner, with extension, with 4 hooks 400 to 600 kg/m

    - 4 carcasses in a circle of 1.00 m 300 to 400 kg/m

    separation of tracks 1.00 m

    - separately hung on a runner with gambrel-separator 250 to 400 kg/m

    3 to 5 carcasses/m. Separation of tracks 0.90 to 1.00 m

    - on hangers, carcass per hook 100 to 150 kg/m

    separation 3/m

    OFFAL

    These are on wall hooks spaced at 125 mm or disposed in tubs of 30 litres.

    - hung on bars, wall hooks, superimposed, mounted on trucks on the ground 250 to 300 kg/m2

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    Correct system for alley loading is 1, 2, 3

    The palletization layout plan must take account of distances between store elements. They are in the range of 510 cm betweenpallets, 1520 cm along the walls and a stacking limit of 4060 cm below the ceiling. The gangways for forklift truck circulationdepend on the type of truck, but are in the range of 2.15 to 3.0 m.

    Air circulation inside the store is expressed by the air speed (m/s) through an empty cross-section of the store and also by thechamber coefficient of air circulation, which is the number of times the air equivalent to the total internal volume of the emptychamber passes through the cooler in one hour. Both are obviously related, but the latter is more commonly used for chambersthan for tunnels as it gives a clearer idea of air movement.

    FIGURE 6Forklift truck moving carcasses

    Air change refers to replacing the air inside the chamber with clean external air, thus avoiding an accumulation of undesirableodours or volatile components. Air changes need not be considered in frozen storage as frozen produce does not give off odoursbut it must be taken into account for chilled products, particularly if they are mixed. It is especially important for meat products thatthe external air comes from a clean source, with no noxious components, and it should be passed through a filter fine enough toretain at least dust. Air should be changed as seldom as possible as any change disturbs the storage conditions and increases

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    running costs: the external air has to be dried and cooled and the frost deposit increased on the evaporator. The outside air shouldbe cooled and dehumidified before entering the chamber, or it should at least go immediately over the cooler.

    It is possible to calculate the volume of introduced air required to reduce contaminant concentration to a safe level but in general itshould be equal to five times the volume of the room to reduce contaminants by 99 percent (although it has been claimed that if thisvolume is less than eight to ten times the volume of the room the dilution of contaminants may be incomplete).

    Air change can be achieved in a small room by opening the door, but this is a cumbersome method, alternating with brief periods ofrunning the refrigeration machinery to restore storage temperature. For large rooms of over 1 000 m3 it is necessary to employ fansto induce change and drive the outside air over the cooler.

    It follows that every time the cold store door is opened an air exchange is generated by inside and outside air density differences.Although this exchange is sometimes beneficial, when the door is open too long or the type of product stored does not need airpurification it clearly becomes an extra running cost and has to be prevented.

    UNLOADING COLD ROOMS

    When products leave the cold room there is a risk of condensation of atmospheric humidity on the cold surfaces, making them wetand liable to microbial development. This can damage the packaging materials or spoil their appearance, which can sometimes beirreversible if carton or cardboard packaging is used.

    Condensation occurs when the dew point of the ambient air is higher than the surface temperature of the product or its packaging.At this point it is necessary to take some precautions, such as proceeding on a progressive rewarming pattern, or promoting quickevaporation of the moisture formed by introducing slightly warmed dry air, or covering the product with awning or, finally, usingpackaging materials that resist the adverse effect of the moisture.

    The graph in Figure 7 shows how to calculate if there is any risk of condensation when moving a product from storage to a differentambient temperature.

    For efficient management and stock control, any unloading operation must obviously be written on the control table for thechamber, including all relevant data (see loading and unloading record sheet in the annex).

    HYGIENE AND DISINFECTION

    Cold chambers intended for meat chilling and chilled storage must be kept in a strictly hygienic condition as microbial invasion is agrave risk. The following operations are essential:

    immediately eliminate all waste in a cold room; each time a room is emptied, or after rewarming rooms at low temperature, wash floors and walls with detergent and hot

    water, rinse them with clean water, and spray with a solution containing active chlorine (0.3 percent); clean pallets and storage containers every four months; disinfect chilled storage rooms for 48 hours at least twice a year and frozen product rooms when they are emptied; before storing animal products in rooms that have contained strongly odorous fruits and vegetables, deodorize by washing,

    prolonged ventilation and finally spraying with a solution containing ammonium salts.

    Hygiene must be maintained after storage, during transport and distribution. Transport over long distances should be in refrigeratedvehicles, which must be cleaned and disinfected after every day's duty.

    FIGURE 7Conditions for condensation on the surface of cold produce

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    From Recommended conditions for cold storage of perishable produce.International Institute of Refrigeration, Paris, 1967.

    HANDLING METHODS AND EQUIPMENT

    There are two very distinct systems of meat handling. The first is for carcasses or large cuts during chilling and chilled storage. Themeat is hung on overhead rails of appropriate height, which can be pushed by hand or can be mechanically transported. The latteris more common in continuous systems and high-capacity stores. The second method uses forklift trucks and is employed forfrozen meats of different shapes, chilled or frozen packaged cuts in geometrical containers and even chilled carcasses of small

    animals or quarters of large animals. These are hung from specifically designed crates (see Figure 6) which can be stacked in thesame way as pallets.

    Internal transport must be rationally linked to that used for the reception of goods and for distribution.

    When the chilling and chilled storage facilities are annexed to a slaughterhouse the type of rail and the height of chambers anddoors are planned accordingly. The design of the chambers must take into account the supporting rails and beams, adapting thecoolers for good air circulation.

    The distribution of rails inside a chamber must allow for easy control of turnover with as little handling as possible. The number ofrails and their location are dependent on the room's stock rotation, but keeping in mind that the length of storage for chilled meat isusually rather short.

    For pallets and similar stacking elements the layout of the chamber is based on the pallet module, including the size of the pallet,tolerance of air circulation and ease of manoeuvre. Different lot sizes may require different spacing of gangways.

    Pallets, which can be made of different materials, are becoming standardized, the most usual dimensions being 0.801.001.20 m.

    The shorter and longer dimensions can be increased by 5 and 15 cm respectively to set up the recommended pallet module.

    Stacking width is influenced by the width of the gangway and the length of the pallets. The width of the gangway depends on theforklift truck used and the depth of the pallets depends on stock rotation the slower the rotation the deeper the pallets. Palletstacking depth is three to four pallets for a high rotation and seven to eight pallets for a low rotation.

    FIGURE 8Types of pallet used for forklift truck handling and stacking

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    Several layers of boxes can be used on a pallet, the number being determined mainly by the mechanical resistance of thepackages and their shape for ease of piling. Five to six layers are usual and sometimes seven are possible. The number of pallets

    in a pile is also dependent on the mechanical resistance of the packages and on the type and reach of the forklift truck used forstacking. A stacking height of two to four pallets is the most common, but for large stores with a low rotation up to five pallets wouldbe suitable.

    To avoid any problem of box resistance, fixed racks made of suitably resistant material can be installed in which pallet loads can beplaced by the forklift truck (see Figure 9). The only inconvenience, besides higher installation costs, is that they occupy a fixedspace. When it is necessary to save most of the space occupied by the gangways it can be worth installing movable racks, thoughinstallation is rather expensive.

    FIGURE 9Rotating truck operation

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    There is a trend toward the total automatization of stacking systems, combined with computer-controlled stock direction andchecking; obviously the increased investment costs must be taken into account.

    Forklift trucks can be powered electrically, by LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) or petrol. Each has advantages and disadvantages.Petrol-operated trucks emit dangerous fumes so they are not recommended for meat cold stores. LPG-operated trucks producemoderate fumes and are noisy; their only advantage over electrically operated trucks is that they are faster. Electrically operatedtrucks need their batteries recharged every working period or alternating batteries when operated for long periods.

    Automatic transmission is essential so the trucks can be started and stopped accurately, and also for exact placing. Automatictransmission is incorporated in all modern machines.

    Special trucks are used in cold stores where space saving has resulted in movement problems. Rotating and retractable trucks(Figure 9) are an example, but their cost ranges from twice to four times that of a normal truck.

    Sometimes conveyors are used for internal transport, as they are less expensive than trucks. As with overhead rails, they areuseful for continuous transport with no crossing traffic.

    DESIGN

    The distribution of the cold store and its flow pattern are determined by their relation to the rest of the operations and the sequencethey have to follow. There are some essential points to be considered.

    A cold store basically incorporates a reception room, where fresh meat is received and inspected at a controlled room temperaturebetween 8and 12C, dispatch and holding rooms at about 24 C, and one or several cold chambers for meat and offal atappropriate storage temperature. It may incorporate a cutting and deboning room at a temperature between 8 and 12C, apackaging room and a sales room, both with a low temperature and dew point at about 5 to 7C. For freezing and frozen storagethere are freezing tunnels or rooms at temperatures ranging from -30 to -45C, and frozen storage chambers at a temperature tosuit the intended storage period. General requirements are a machine room, offices and cloakroom.

    The main objective in designing a cold store is to avoid unused space, so the location of labour premises, offices, etc., must beconsidered when filling up gaps.

    Cold chambers will face directly either the holding room or the cutting and packaging room. Corridors for traffic should be reducedto a minimum. The use of large anterooms kept at an intermediate temperature between ambient and storage is now obsolete, butthese may be of interest in hot and humid climates to avoid condensation on the product.

    The location of the machinery room is of paramount importance. It should be as close to the cold rooms as possible and especiallyto the cooling equipment. This is one of the design difficulties to be resolved if future extension is planned. The room must bereadily accessible from outside.

    The width of the corridors will depend on the normal traffic. If it is heavy, corridors will be designed for two-way truck movement -one-way is possible only when two trucks do not cross during transport operations. Corridor width ranges from 2.00 m for one-wayto 3.60 m for two-way traffic. Width is also affected by the size of the forklift truck, i.e. the load it is able to transport, within therange of 1 to 3 tonnes. The general trend is to build traffic corridors which are wide enough for two loaded trucks to pass, evenwhen unit loads occupy part of them while waiting for handling. In normal operation areas a width of 45 m is recommended.

    In one-way corridors any right-angle turn that might prove difficult for truck movement should have the width increased.

    Figure 10 gives some basic measurements that concern the manoeuvrability of the usual type of forklift truck.

    Door dimensions must be in relation to transport, the type and size of forklift truck and the width of the traffic corridor, if this is notwide enough for a right-angle turn the door must be sufficiently wide to allow an inclined entrance. Door width for mechanical

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    handling ranges between 1.80 and 2.10 m. Carcasses laid on pallets need a 2.50 m door and up to 2.80 m when the corridor is notwide enough for a 90 degree turn.

    FIGURE 10Manoeuvrability of forklift trucks

    Door height will be determined by the height of the load: the pallet unit is usually from 2.20 to 2.80 m for normal trucks and up to3.30 m for high stacking trucks. As height favours the entrance of warm humid air when the door is open, it should be kept to aminimum.

    With carcass handling door height is obviously dictated by overhead rails and the mechanism that opens and closes the doors.

    Door must be thermally isolated to the same extent as the walls. The insulation is placed within a rigid frame which can withstandtough handling without distortion. The doors must close tightly against the framework, exerting high pressure on a dense elasticrubber-strip filling with a very regular contact surface; the closing system must be strongenough to press the door against the stripand keep it in that position. For cold rooms at temperatures below 0C the strip must be electrically heated to avoid iceaccumulation.

    Although there are different ways of opening doors (rotating on hinges, sliding horizontally or vertically), the type most used in coldrooms is the one that opens horizontally.

    For quick opening and closing (in the range of few seconds) doors should be mechanically or pneumatically operated. The openingis activated by a photo-electric cell or more commonly by a switch pull placed close to the door which can be operated by the driverwithout moving from the truck. An automatic controller fixes the time necessary to pass through the door and closes it.

    FIGURE 11Air curtain and flexible plastic doors preventing thermal exchange

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    Every time a door opens an intense exchange of inside and ambient air takes place. When openings are frequent the heat andhumidity loads in the cold room may be high, considerably increasing refrigeration and frost deposit on coolers. To reduce airexchange, flexible transparent plastic doors, transparent swinging doors or air curtains are used. The first two types need constantmaintenance as they often break when undergoing heavy duty; in addition they come in contact with merchandise and labourers'clothes, which is hygienically dangerous.

    Some precaution in design will help to reduce air exchange. The number of doors should be reduced to a minimum and they shouldbe for one-way traffic; they should not be placed opposite each other, and should face away from prevailing winds.

    The air curtain system consists of a powerful blower, usually sited above the door, which induces a strong horizontal or vertical air

    draught (Figure 11). This causes dynamic pressure which balances the density effect of the inside cold air and prevents cold airleaving and warm air entering the store. The capacity of the blower depends on the door size. For instance, for a door 2 m high theair flow should be 1 500 m3/h, and for a 4m door about 3 000 m3/h. The angle of the air jet depends on the temperature differencebetween the cold store and the corridor. As a guide the angle will range from five to 15 degrees; the greater the temperaturedifference the higher the angle.

    The efficiency of the air curtain system is considered to be between 60 and 70 percent.

    LOADING DOCKS

    Loading docks ease the handling and transfer of pallets to and from the cold stores and transport vehicles, so most stores areprovided with loading/ unloading docks adapted to road or railway transport. For road transport the problem is to determine theheight of the dock to correspond with average vehicle height: for trucks it will be about 1.40 m, but for distribution vans it will be aslow as 60 cm. Moreover when the vehicle is loaded or unloaded its height changes, and this is particularly awkward when theforklift truck has to enter it. Levelling facilities will adjust the dock to any vehicle height; the dock and truck platform thuscorresponding at any time of the loading/ unloading operation (Figure 12).

    Docks for railway transport can be built to a standard height.

    The length of a loading bank should allow the simultaneous handling of an adequate number of vehicles; it will depend on the sizeof the cold store and its rotation of stored produce, which also influence the depth of the bank. The minimum recommended depthis 6 m, but one of 810 m is considered to be more suitable.

    Loading docks are usually under cover, sometimes simply an extended canopy open all around and sometimes enclosed with asurrounding wall and doors. The choice of open or enclosed docks is mainly influenced by climate and the handling systememployed.

    Enclosed docks are usually cooled and they should be used where temperature and humidity are high, and when the merchandiseis handled excessively with a long exposure in conditions that are very different from those of storage. Any delay in transfer fromtrucks to cold store in an open dock is obviously more detrimental than in a cooled enclosed dock.

    Cooled loading docks must be insulated and are equipped with a refrigeration system; the floor should be heated to preventcondensation.

    FIGURE 12Dock levelling system

    The height of the canopy is determined by the height of the store doors plus the mechanisms above the lintels for door openingand/or air curtain.

    Where for economy of handling two pallets are superimposed for transfer to the cold store, this unit load height will decide the freeheight of the loading dock roof.

    Cooled dock doors should be equipped with a perimeter cushion seal to adjust the rear of the truck to the loading door, reducingthe cold air leakage. This system is usually provided with a displacement mechanism which, together with the levelling device, willease handling and the maintenance of the loading dock temperature (see Figure 13).

    Part of the loading dock is sometimes utilized to house offices, cloakrooms and, particularly, a supervisor's room for the directcontrol of the handling operations as efficient direction in loading is essential. Battery changing facilities may also be built into thedock at a point which does not interfere with traffic; adequate ventilation should be provided to prevent gas accumulation.

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    When the temperature of a cooled dock is very exacting warming rooms for personnel are incorporated in it.

    FIGURE 13Docking facilities

    Another solution for covering the loading dock is to locate the administrative offices above it. Good insulation of the office floors isnecessary when the temperature of the enclosed dock is low.

    TRANSPORT

    The transport of meat in a chilled or frozen state must be undertaken at a controlled temperature so as not to exceed the thresholdthat encourages microbial development or starts thawing or recrystallization in frozen meats.

    Transport vehicles are classified in three categories: insulated, refrigerated and mechanically refrigerated.

    Insulated vehicles should be used only for short distances and for short periods of distribution when not much door opening isinvolved.

    Both types of refrigerated vehicle are employed for long hauls. Ice, solid carbon dioxide and eutectic mixtures add enormous weightto the load to be transported, reducing the space for merchandise. The same is true of the liquid nitrogen refrigeration system forlong journeys as the dead weight of the cylinders containing liquid nitrogen will be too high. Only mechanically refrigerated vehiclesshould be considered at present for long-distance transport.

    Insulation should be thick enough to give low values for the overall heat transfer coefficient without reducing load space. For warmcountries reinforced insulation leading to an overall heat transfer coefficient under 0.4 W/m2C is recommended.

    To reduce transport time and cope more easily with vehicle movement to and from cold stores large traffic areas arerecommended. The size of the forecourt of the loading docks will depend on traffic and the size of the trucks, but it should be atleast 35 m wide when high traffic is expected and trucks can line up at right angles to the dock.

    Trucks with an overhead rail should be used for carcass transport. Rails should be standardized to ease transfer from the cold storeto the truck, eliminating additional handling. Chilled carcasses must not be piled on the floor.

    FIGURE 14Meat processing plant flow sheet, including freezing, cutting, deboning, packaging and storage

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    Hygiene is vital in meat transport. Vehicles must be thoroughly cleaned and disinfected immediately after unloading or at leastbefore loading. Floor, walls, racks and hooks must be faultlessly clean. Interior finishing should be washable and waterproof.

    Offal must be transported in hermetic containers made of material that is easy to clean. Poultry should be packaged individually.

    LAYOUT OF SLAUGHTERHOUSE AND CUTTING ROOM

    The slaughterhouse and cutting room, together or autonomously, are closely related to cold storage chambers so they condition thegeneral layout of the industrial plant. When they are integrated, the design is more complicated, due to the many possibilities offlow pattern.

    FIGURE 15Plant distribution for a general store

    After dressing and dousing, carcasses will generally pass quickly to chilling rooms or tunnels. As they do not enter the chilling roomcontinuously a certain area should be provided where carcasses can be accumulated; its surface will depend on the killing rate andthe chilling programme.

    The doors of the chilling rooms will open on to this area. There may be only one chilling room in small slaughterhouses and fromtwo to four in others; the total capacity must suffice for peak day slaughtering.

    After four hours in the chilling room carcasses will move to the storage rooms. Storage capacity will be at least equal to that of thechilling room or higher if some buffer stock is expected. The number of rooms can be reduced depending on total capacity, themeat distribution programme and whether the cutting room is incorporated in the slaughterhouse.

    Part of the already chilled meat may be utilized for cutting and packaging, or deboning and packaging, and part for freezing. The

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    distribution programme will indicate the average quantities for these different treatments and these will determine the capacity andsize of the different sections.

    Meats processed in the cutting and packaging rooms may be distributed fresh or chilled, or be frozen for frozen storage or transportto other frozen storage centres.

    One loading dock enclosed and refr igerated to a temperature low enough to prevent surface thawing, about -10C, can handle theshipment of all types of cuts and boxed meats. Chilled carcasses and quarters will be shifted by overhead rails and chilled packagecuts and frozen meats will be handled on forklift trucks.

    Figure 14 is a flow sheet explaining the functioning of the meat complex and Figure 15 suggests the layout.

    Page 14 of 14Manual on meat cold store operation and management