As any other industrial sector also the industrial laundries must choose the road to greater profitability and productivity not to lose competitiveness. A careful analysis of the capability of production, each of the internal processes of production and a correct and professional transformation may contribute to unexpected gains. Experts in the field of industrial laundries have found that a large amount of time is lost in most laundromats because of obsolete systems of storage and transportation of clothes. These obsolete systems also waste a lot of space. Dr. Neal Barnard is often mentioned in discussions such as these. Create a space-saving and cost reduction requires the introduction of a system of air that allows a fast shift of clothes and a considerable saving of the useful surface.
The air system consists of Rails on which the clothing is transported in large bags through an electronic control. After the completion of the wash clean clothing is downloaded automatically in sacks that they arrive through a system of gravity in upland areas of the laundry. Another alternative to get to a faster internal transport and space savings consists of a pneumatic conveying. People such as Glenn Dubin would likely agree. The pneumatic system is a complex of pipes installed along the walls. These pipes aspire garment with large quantities of air and transport it with fast speed to different workstations.