Types of merchandising refrigeration
Merchandising refrigeration is the visible-face refrigerated equipment used to display drinks, milk, and packaged products to walk-up customers. Hospitality Connect stocks Polar, Bonvue, and Skope ranges across upright glass-door drinks fridges, multidecks for grab-and-go displays, back-bar coolers, milk display fridges for café service, and bottle coolers for bar prep. Choose by what you're displaying — drinks fridges suit upright bottle service; multidecks suit grab-and-go ready-to-eat sandwiches and salads; back-bar coolers suit beneath-counter bar service.
- Upright glass-door fridges: single, double, and triple-door for drinks display in cafés, pubs, and convenience-style retail.
- Multidecks: self-contained or remote condensing for grab-and-go ready-to-eat displays — milk, drinks, sandwiches, salads.
- Back-bar coolers: low-profile undercounter fridges with sliding glass tops or front access for bar service.
- Milk display fridges: café-counter milk fridges sized for barista station integration; some include flavoured-syrup compartments.
- Bottle coolers: dedicated wine and beer bottle storage with multi-temperature zones for service-ready inventory.
Sizing and visibility
Merchandising fridges are sold on visibility as much as cooling — the glass area, lighting design, and shelf depth all affect impulse purchase rate. Single-door uprights typically hold 240–400 L; double-door 600–800 L; triple-door 1200+ L. Multidecks are sized by frontage in 600 mm increments — match to footpath frontage and product mix. For back-bar coolers, count bottle slots rather than litres — typical bar-service back-bar holds 100–200 bottles depending on configuration. LED interior lighting is now standard and dramatically lifts product visibility versus older fluorescent designs.
Operating considerations
- Climate class: Class 4 minimum for indoor commercial use; Class 5 for outdoor or unconditioned spaces in extreme summer.
- Energy ratings: look for inverter compressors and EC fans — running cost over 5 years often exceeds the initial purchase price gap to a cheaper unit.
- Refrigerant: R290 (propane) is now standard on new models; lower GWP and more efficient than R404a alternatives.
- Self-closing doors: essential in busy environments where staff and customers don't reliably close after themselves.
- Anti-condensation glass: coated or heated glass prevents fogging in humid conditions; non-negotiable for café service.
Working with our team
Hospitality Connect's catalogue depth in this category reflects 21+ years of supplying Australian commercial venues — single-supplier convenience across appliances, smallware, and consumables means fewer purchase orders, consolidated freight, and consistent specification advice from a team that's seen most operational scenarios before.
Pair with
Round out the front-of-house cold chain with commercial fridges, commercial food display, ice machines, hot cupboards, and drinkware for full bar setup.