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Loading Dock Coordination: The Truck Court, Dock Equipment, and Back-of-House Conflicts Behind Most Logistics Failures

Loading dock failures show up as truck queueing onto the street, dock levelers that don't reach the trailer, or back-of-house aisles too narrow for pallet movement. Each is decided during drawing coordination - and each is catchable in plan review.

CoordinationMay 22, 2026

Loading dock problems show up at opening day in three forms: trucks queueing onto the public street because the truck court can't accommodate the design vehicle, dock levelers that don't reach a fully-loaded trailer because the dock height is wrong for the actual fleet, or back-of-house aisles that can't accommodate pallet movement because the architect planned for foot traffic. All three are committed during drawing coordination, months before any truck arrives.

What makes loading dock design unusually error-prone is that it sits between civil engineering (site, paving, drainage), architecture (back-of-house plan, dock doors), mechanical (dock seals, dehumidification), and operations (fleet, dock equipment vendor) - and the operations input usually arrives last, after the architectural decisions have hardened.

The Five Loading Dock Failures Most Often Found in Drawing Review

Across distribution, retail, restaurant, hospital, and museum loading-dock failures, the same coordination gaps recur.

  • Truck court depth and apron radius designed for a generic WB-50 design vehicle when the actual fleet is WB-67, WB-72, or articulated. The trailer doesn't track around the radius and a corner of the dock geometry has to be removed.
  • Dock leveler reach and stroke (typically 18-inch above and 12-inch below dock height for hydraulic levelers) doesn't accommodate the actual trailer height range, especially mixed-fleet operations with refrigerated trailers, container chassis, and box trucks all using the same dock.
  • Dock door size on the architectural plan doesn't match the trailer envelope - 9-foot doors don't accommodate the 9-foot-6-inch refrigerated trailers common in food distribution.
  • Back-of-house aisle width planned for foot traffic (5–6 feet) when the actual operations need pallet jack and forklift movement (minimum 8 feet for pallet jack, 12 feet for forklift counterbalance turning).
  • Trash compactor screen wall or service yard fence not coordinated with utility-pole guy wires, transformer pad clearances, or fire-truck access - the wall has to move after construction starts.

What to Cross-Reference During Coordination

The review needs to integrate the truck court geometry from the civil drawings, the dock equipment and door sizing from the architectural drawings, and the actual operational fleet and flow from the owner or end-user.

  • Confirm the design vehicle in the civil engineer's turning template matches the actual fleet - verify with the owner or distribution operator before the site is paved.
  • Cross-check dock leveler reach and stroke against the trailer height range expected, not just one nominal trailer height.
  • Verify dock door rough-opening size accommodates the largest trailer height, including refrigeration units, lift gates, and trailer interior height.
  • Confirm back-of-house aisle widths support pallet jack, forklift, and pedestrian traffic at the planned density - not the IBC egress minimum.
  • Coordinate trash compactor, service yard, and waste hauler access against fire-truck access, transformer pad clearance, and any easements.

Why This Pays Off Early

Loading dock failures discovered after the slab is poured are extremely expensive - relocating a dock door, reshaping a truck court, or rebuilding a service yard typically costs 20–50x what catching it in design would have. Helonic compares civil, architectural, and back-of-house drawings to surface dock coordination conflicts during design coordination.

Coordinate Truck Court and Dock Geometry Early

Helonic compares site civil, architectural, and back-of-house drawings to flag the truck court geometry, dock leveler reach, dock door size, and storage flow conflicts that derail logistics on opening day.