Warehouse Temperature Mapping
Wireless Temperature Mapping
Warehouse qualification mapping with temporary sensor grids deployed across all zones. Supports summer/winter seasonal cycles as required by GDP/GMP/HACCP. Reveals temperature distribution patterns and provides permanent monitoring design recommendations.
Seasonal Warehouse Zone Qualification
Large warehouses and distribution centres experience dramatically different temperature distributions between summer and winter, with loading docks, roof sections, and perimeter zones behaving as thermal weak points during peak seasons. GDP, GMP, and HACCP all require that qualification studies reflect these seasonal extremes rather than a single favourable snapshot. Warehouse mapping across both seasonal cycles provides the documented baseline needed to design a compliant permanent monitoring layout.
How it's deployed
A temporary sensor grid of 30 to 150 or more nodes is distributed across all storage zones, aisles, height levels, and adjacency risks such as dock doors and external walls, using a pre-agreed grid density that matches the warehouse footprint and product risk classification. Sensors transmit wirelessly to strategically placed gateways so no cable runs are required, enabling rapid deployment without disrupting warehouse operations.
Evidence & Reporting
The study delivers a GDP/GMP-aligned warehouse qualification report covering both seasonal cycles, with spatial temperature maps for each zone and height layer, identification of all locations exceeding defined thresholds, and a risk-ranked list of monitoring positions for the permanent system. Supporting documentation includes sensor calibration certificates, raw data archives, and a compliance gap analysis cross-referenced to GDP Chapter 3 storage requirements.
Included and Optional Capabilities
Included
- Mapping Equipment Kit
Temporary sensor deployment for mapping
- Data Collection & Analysis
Professional data analysis
- Sensor Placement Recommendations
Optimal permanent sensor locations
Optional add-ons
- Compliance Gap Analysis
Regulatory compliance assessment
Related Wireless Temperature Mapping Offerings
Frequently Asked Questions
Each controlled temperature zone should be documented separately because the qualification acceptance criteria, sensor density requirements, and risk profiles differ between ambient and chilled areas. In practice we conduct both zones in the same campaign visit to minimise disruption, and the final report includes clearly separated qualification sections for each zone with its own pass or fail determination.
Each seasonal measurement period typically runs for five to fourteen days to capture normal operational variation. The full programme spanning both seasons therefore runs six to twelve months from first deployment to final combined report. We deliver a preliminary findings summary after each seasonal campaign so your team can act on any critical findings before the full programme concludes.
Yes — the same sensor data and spatial analysis satisfy HACCP requirements for demonstrating that critical control points remain within defined temperature limits, provided the study scope covers all product storage areas and documents worst-case operating conditions. Where GDP and HACCP requirements overlap, we produce a single integrated report rather than two separate documents.
Plan Warehouse Temperature Mapping
Talk with Seemoto about the sensor, gateway, reporting, and compliance setup for warehouse temperature mapping.



