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Charging hub

Charging hub in the SpeicherCampus context: needs power, storage, grid planning and an EMS. Technically, the term is usually described as a site with multiple charging points.

What does charging hub mean?

A charging hub is a site with multiple charging points — from a depot with eight AC wallboxes to a fast-charging site with DC dispensers in the megawatt range. Its core problem is almost always power: many vehicles charge simultaneously, and the grid cannot supply the sum.

Storage and charging management together form the solution: the storage system buffers power peaks from the battery, while charging management distributes the available power intelligently across the vehicles.

What matters in practice

  • set simultaneity realistically: all points rarely charge at rated power
  • analyse charging behaviour: dwell times often allow throttled charging
  • choose a high storage C-rate — charging hubs need power more than capacity
  • HPC sites (150 kW+ per dispenser) are a design class of their own

Practical example

A haulage yard charges 14 electric trucks overnight. Instead of an 800 kW grid upgrade, a container storage system buffers the first charging wave and the management staggers the rest through the night — the existing 400 kW connection remained sufficient.

The SpeicherCampus perspective

Charging hubs are a focus of the SpeicherCampus project review: charging behaviour, grid connection and storage power are calculated as one system, not three trades.