Dorner Batch

UX/UI Design
UI Design
Responsive Design
Interactive Prototypes
dornerBatch UX/UI Design

A focused B2B dashboard for monitoring and understanding batching plants in real time. Designed to bring clarity to complex production environments.

Real-Time Control for Industrial Batching

dornerBatch is built for operators, plant managers, and production teams working in demanding industrial environments. It is used directly at batching plants, control rooms, and operational desks where every second counts. The product exists to turn complex production data into clear, actionable insights. No guessing. No hunting for numbers.

Batching systems generate massive amounts of data. dornerBatch brings order to that chaos. It shows plant status, production output, material levels, and system messages at a glance. Operators instantly see what is running, what needs attention, and where action is required. The interface supports fast decisions under pressure. Clear visuals replace dense tables. Priorities stand out. Problems surface early.

The result is a dashboard that feels calm even when production is not. It reduces cognitive load, shortens reaction times, and supports safer, more efficient plant operations.

Design Approach for Industrial Systems

The main challenge was complexity. Batching plants combine production data, material logistics, and system messages in parallel. Our goal was to design an interface that stays readable during daily operation, not just in ideal conditions.

We focused on clear hierarchy, strong contrast, and predictable interaction patterns. Information is grouped by relevance, not by technical structure. Critical states are visible immediately. Secondary data remains accessible without visual noise. Color is used strictly for meaning, never decoration.

The design supports long shifts and routine work. Layouts are calm and consistent. Visual indicators communicate status faster than text. Operators do not need manuals to understand the system. The interface explains itself through structure and behavior. Every decision followed one rule: reduce thinking time and increase confidence.


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