moving-box-command-center

Create a practical moving box command center for people packing for a move who want painless unpacking, including a room-code label system, box tracker, first-night list, essentials tracking, and unpack order. Use when someone is labeling boxes, preparing to move homes, or trying to avoid losing essentials during a move.

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Install skill "moving-box-command-center" with this command: npx skills add harrylabsj/moving-box-command-center

Moving Box Command Center

Overview

Use this skill when a user is packing for a move and wants a simple system that makes loading, finding essentials, and unpacking easier. Focus on clear room codes, box numbering, visible labels, a tracker, first-night access, and an unpacking sequence.

This is a prompt-only household logistics skill. It does not replace professional mover guidance, lease rules, building rules, storage facility rules, insurance advice, or safety instructions for heavy, sharp, hazardous, or fragile items.

Intake

Ask only for details needed to build the moving box system:

  • Move date, packing stage, and whether movers, friends, or the user will carry boxes
  • Current rooms and destination rooms
  • Any storage unit, temporary housing, stairs, elevator, parking, loading dock, or building constraints
  • Household members, pets, accessibility needs, and items needed on the first night
  • Fragile categories, heavy categories, valuables, documents, medications, chargers, tools, linens, and basic kitchen needs
  • Preferred tracking method, such as paper, spreadsheet, notes app, or labels plus photos

Avoid asking for sensitive financial, legal, medical, or identity document details. If the user mentions important documents, treat them as a category and advise keeping them personally controlled.

Workflow

  1. Define zones. Map origin rooms to destination rooms and create a short code for each zone, such as KIT for kitchen, BED1 for main bedroom, BATH for bathroom, OFFICE for office, or STORE for storage.
  2. Assign codes and numbering rules. Give every box a zone code, sequential number, priority mark, and optional handling mark. Use a consistent format such as KIT-01, KIT-02, and BED1-01.
  3. Design the label system. Put labels on the top and at least one long side. Include room code, box number, destination room, priority, handling note, and a short contents summary without exposing valuables.
  4. Build the box tracker. Create tracker columns for box ID, destination zone, contents summary, priority, fragile or heavy flag, packed status, loaded status, unloaded status, unpacked status, and notes.
  5. Track essentials. Create a first-night box and personal carry items list for medications, documents, chargers, toiletries, basic tools, pet items, bedding, towels, cleaning basics, snacks, and a change of clothes.
  6. Plan unpack order. Recommend an order that restores function first: sleep, bathroom, safety, food, clothing, work or school, then lower-priority storage and decor.
  7. Add day-of controls. Include a door or floor map, color tape or marker plan if helpful, mover instructions, and a lost-box check at the destination.

Output Format

Return these sections:

  1. Move Snapshot: move stage, origin zones, destination zones, constraints, who is carrying boxes, and main risks.
  2. Room-Code System: zone code, destination room, label color or marker, priority level, and notes.
  3. Box Label Template: exact label fields and a few filled examples.
  4. Box Tracker: a ready-to-copy table with the recommended columns and starter rows.
  5. First-Night List: personal carry, first-night box, cleaning starter kit, tool starter kit, pet or kid essentials if relevant, and items not to pack on the truck.
  6. Packing Rules: numbering, contents summaries, photo habits, how to mark open-first boxes, and how to handle mixed-room boxes.
  7. Unpack Order: first two hours, first night, first morning, first weekend, and later boxes.
  8. Safety and Handling Notes: heavy-box limits, fragile protection, lifting reminders, hazardous items, and when to use qualified help.

Labeling Rules

  • Use short, readable room codes that are distinct at a glance.
  • Number boxes as they are sealed, not before they are packed.
  • Keep label summaries useful but not theft-attracting; write "documents" or "office files" rather than listing sensitive records.
  • Mark "open first" boxes visibly on multiple sides.
  • Use "heavy" on small dense boxes such as books, tools, dishes, and pantry goods.
  • Photograph high-value or fragile box contents before sealing when useful for personal records.
  • Keep keys, identification, passports, medications, payment cards, critical documents, laptops, chargers, and irreplaceable items with the user when possible.

Safety Boundaries

  • Do not encourage unsafe lifting, overloaded boxes, blocked exits, unstable stacks, or rushing with fragile items.
  • Remind the user to keep heavy boxes small, lift with care, ask for help, and use dollies, straps, or professional movers when needed.
  • Flag fragile items for padding, upright orientation, and top-load placement when appropriate.
  • Do not advise packing hazardous, flammable, leaking, perishable, or prohibited items for a moving truck. Suggest checking mover, building, storage, and local rules.
  • For appliances, mounted fixtures, gas lines, electrical work, pianos, safes, large furniture, and other high-risk items, recommend qualified help.

Acceptance Criteria

  1. Produces a room-code label system, box tracker, first-night list, and unpack order.
  2. Covers define zones, assign codes, label boxes, track essentials, and plan unpack order.
  3. Includes heavy and fragile handling reminders.
  4. Avoids exposing sensitive valuables or document details in labels.
  5. Requires no code execution, no credentials, no API access, and no network dependency.

Example Prompts

  • "I'm moving next month and want a box labeling system that makes unpacking painless."
  • "Help me make a tracker for all my moving boxes."
  • "What should go in my first-night moving box?"
  • "I have movers coming and need labels that tell them where everything goes."
  • "Create a packing command center for a two-bedroom apartment move."

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