I can relate to all of your observations Lyle. I believe things have moved forward since the year 2000, the Building Regs ADB contains guidance on the safe fixing and appropriate use of sandwich panels, inevitably if exposed to a fire they used to delaminate and lose all structural strength creating huge hazards for firefighting. The industry has also moved on with codes of practice and LPCB approved panels are used almost universally. delamination and collapse are less likely as a result, though fortunately my main former client tended to mount the plant on structural mezzanines above the freezer ceilings. Current practice is to make the building outer envelope the insulated lining and eliminate voids around and above the freezer box. Freezer plant is in an adjoining plant room and where CO2 is used tends to be much more compact than ammonia.
Before retirement it appeared to me that there was a move away from ammonia to CO2 but I am not sure how universal this is.
One concept I have struggled with is the pressure from some insurance companies to install sprinklers in freezers. We always have to recognise that due to a need for insulation doors are few and ventilation very unusual, creating potential hazards for firefighters. However where sprinklers are installed, and as storage tends to be on palletised racks, in rack sprinklers are often the only way of compliance with the codes. Obviously the system has dry pipes and in a fire will no doubt work as intended. But accidents do occur, one of my clients staff knocked off a head discharging water into the freezer, in the absence of heat from a fire plume it snowed for a considerable time creating havoc. The reinstatement was the hardest and most disruptive problem with all pipes in the vicinity having to be dismantled as it could not be confirmed that they were free of ice internally, moving frozen stock covered in ice was very difficult, expensive, dangerous and time consuming.