In the context of rapid development of new energy, the ownership and penetration rate of electric heavy trucks continue to rise, and charging station demand is increasing. Station construction involves multiple professional fields. Here is a guide based on Hardhitter’s experience. I. Preliminary Planning and Research. (I) Market demand analysis: Understand local truck ownership and operation modes (mine vs. logistics). (II) Site evaluation: 1. Traffic convenience (close to highways, logistics parks, ports, mines). 2. Electricity supply (grid capacity and stability, pricing policies). 3. Land resources (industrial land, lease/purchase terms). II. Project Approval and Filing. (I) Project initiation: Feasibility study report (market demand, technology, economic evaluation). (II) Planning approval: Layout, safety, and coordination with surroundings. (III) Electricity access approval: Load calculation and future expansion. III. Equipment Selection and Procurement. (I) Charging equipment: DC fast charging (300kW+ for new trucks), compatibility, safety, intelligence. (II) Supporting equipment: Transformers, distribution cabinets, monitoring systems, fire protection. IV. Construction and Implementation. (I) Infrastructure: Site leveling, building construction (charging sheds with 4.5m+ height), cable trenches. (II) Equipment installation and debugging: Professional installation, single-unit debugging, and multi-unit linkage testing. V. Operation Preparation and Acceptance. (I) Personnel training (operation, safety, customer service). (II) Operation preparation (management system, pricing, emergency plans). (III) Acceptance: Quality, performance, and safety checks. Building a heavy truck charging station is a complex project requiring careful planning and execution. We hope this guide provides helpful direction. Follow us for more details.