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.
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.
Across distribution, retail, restaurant, hospital, and museum loading-dock failures, the same coordination gaps recur.
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.
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.
Related guides, comparisons, and features for coordination teams.
How service yards interact with site civil, fire-truck access, and waste collection.
Industry-specific drawing review challenges across distribution and fulfillment facilities.
How site logistics plans are reviewed for buildability and access.