A practical guide to efficiency, safety, and sustainability — covering pallet standards, racking layout, forklift dynamics, and ESG-ready design for Malaysian warehouses.
Designing a warehouse in Malaysia requires a strategic balance between local logistics standards, operational flow, and the growing push toward ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) goals. Whether you are setting up a new facility or auditing an existing one, here are the key pillars of effective warehouse design.
In Malaysia, the "Standard Malaysian Pallet" serves as the blueprint for most racking systems. Understanding the material and dimension limits is critical for safety.
Safety Rule of Thumb: A stack should never exceed 6 times the width of the pallet. For manual handling safety, keep floor stacks below shoulder height (~1.5m).
The way you place your racks dictates your inventory turnover speed (FIFO/FEFO).
Usually a single-row design. Avoid double-deep racking against walls if you require strict FEFO operations — the back pallet becomes difficult to access without moving the front one.
Placing racks in the centre allows access from both sides. This is the gold standard for high-volume FEFO/FIFO, enabling a “pick from one side, replenish from the other” workflow.
Your aisle width is determined by your forklift’s turning radius and the need for speed.
~1.5 to 2 pallet widths (approx. 3.5m) — allows one forklift to operate comfortably.
For high-traffic hubs — wide enough for two forklifts to pass safely without slowing down.
In Malaysia, 3-tier or 4-tier racking is common, requiring forklifts rated to lift to 5 or 6 metres.
Design the warehouse with a distinct Incoming (Receiving) area at one end and Outgoing (Dispatch) at the other. This U-flow or Straight-thru flow prevents bottlenecks.
Place high-velocity (fast-moving) stock at the lowest tiers or closest to shipping docks. Slow-moving or seasonal items should be relegated to the higher tiers (Tiers 3 and 4).
Minor details yield major efficiency. A logical alphanumeric system ensures pickers find items instantly.
| A | The Zone or Aisle |
| 1 | The Bay / Column number |
| 3 | The Tier or Level depth |
With Malaysia’s push toward net-zero, the vast roof space of a warehouse is an untapped asset.
Installing solar PV panels can significantly offset the high energy costs of Cold Room operations (which often run at −18°C).
Beyond ESG compliance, savings on electricity — and the potential to sell excess energy back to the grid — can turn a traditional cost centre into a profit-generating asset.
A well-designed warehouse pairs physical layout with smart software. Learn how a WMS can complement your warehouse design for maximum efficiency.