VS ![]()
Result-Driven Storage Strategy Backed by ROI and Engineering Precision
In high-performance warehouses, storage is no longer just about capacity—it’s about measurable business outcomes. Choosing between Double Deep Pallet Racking + Very Narrow Aisle (VNA) and VNA Pallet Racking directly impacts your cost per pallet, throughput, labor efficiency, and long-term scalability.
This is not a product decision. It’s a performance decision.
A hybrid high-density solution combining 2-deep pallet storage with reduced aisle width.
What it delivers:
VNA Pallet Racking (Single Deep)
A precision-engineered system using ultra-narrow aisles with full pallet accessibility.
What it delivers:
ROI Impact:
Higher density = lower cost per pallet stored and delayed CAPEX on new facilities
ROI Impact:
Higher selectivity = faster picking, fewer handling errors, better inventory control
ROI Impact:
Higher throughput = lower labor cost per pallet moved
Double Deep + VNA:
VNA Only:
ROI Impact:
Higher precision = higher upfront cost, but greater operational consistency and speed
| Factor | Double Deep + VNA | VNA Only |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Investment | Lower | Higher |
| Storage Capacity | Maximum | High |
| Cost per Pallet | Lowest | Medium |
| Throughput | Medium | High |
| Flexibility | Medium |
High
|
Recommended Solution: Double Deep + VNA
Result:
Recommended Solution: VNA Pallet Racking
Result:
To ensure performance, both systems must be engineered—not just installed:
Double Deep + VNA ROI Drivers:
VNA ROI Drivers:
Choose Double Deep + VNA if you want:
**** Maximum storage density
**** Lowest cost per pallet
**** Bulk storage optimization
Choose VNA Only if you want:
**** Speed and operational efficiency
**** Full pallet accessibility
**** High SKU flexibility
---- The best-performing warehouses don’t ask “Which system is better?”
They ask: “Which system delivers the highest return for our operation?”
Ready to optimize your warehouse for measurable ROI?
Let’s design a solution based on your data, flow, and growth strategy—not assumptions.
VS ![]()
Result-Driven Storage Strategy Backed by ROI and Engineering Precision
In high-performance warehouses, storage is no longer just about capacity—it’s about measurable business outcomes. Choosing between Double Deep Pallet Racking + Very Narrow Aisle (VNA) and VNA Pallet Racking directly impacts your cost per pallet, throughput, labor efficiency, and long-term scalability.
This is not a product decision. It’s a performance decision.
A hybrid high-density solution combining 2-deep pallet storage with reduced aisle width.
What it delivers:
VNA Pallet Racking (Single Deep)
A precision-engineered system using ultra-narrow aisles with full pallet accessibility.
What it delivers:
ROI Impact:
Higher density = lower cost per pallet stored and delayed CAPEX on new facilities
ROI Impact:
Higher selectivity = faster picking, fewer handling errors, better inventory control
ROI Impact:
Higher throughput = lower labor cost per pallet moved
Double Deep + VNA:
VNA Only:
ROI Impact:
Higher precision = higher upfront cost, but greater operational consistency and speed
| Factor | Double Deep + VNA | VNA Only |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Investment | Lower | Higher |
| Storage Capacity | Maximum | High |
| Cost per Pallet | Lowest | Medium |
| Throughput | Medium | High |
| Flexibility | Medium |
High
|
Recommended Solution: Double Deep + VNA
Result:
Recommended Solution: VNA Pallet Racking
Result:
To ensure performance, both systems must be engineered—not just installed:
Double Deep + VNA ROI Drivers:
VNA ROI Drivers:
Choose Double Deep + VNA if you want:
**** Maximum storage density
**** Lowest cost per pallet
**** Bulk storage optimization
Choose VNA Only if you want:
**** Speed and operational efficiency
**** Full pallet accessibility
**** High SKU flexibility
---- The best-performing warehouses don’t ask “Which system is better?”
They ask: “Which system delivers the highest return for our operation?”
Ready to optimize your warehouse for measurable ROI?
Let’s design a solution based on your data, flow, and growth strategy—not assumptions.