Facilities Planning and Design
Facilities Planning and Design
Layout Decisions
Table 9.1
Layout Strategies
Project Job Shop
(fixed position) (process oriented)
Examples
Ingall Ship Building Arnold Palmer Hospital
Corp.
Hard Rock Cafes
Trump Plaza
Pittsburgh Airport
Problems/Issues
Move material to the Manage varied material
limited storage area flow for each product
around the site
Table 9.1
Layout Strategies
Work Cells Repetitive/ Continuous
(product families) (product oriented)
Examples
Hallmark Cards Sony’s TV assembly
line
Wheeled Coach
Dodge minivans
Standard Aero
Problems/Issues
Identify product family, Equalize the task time
build teams, cross train at each workstation
team members
Table 9.1
Office Layout
Grouping of workers, their equipment,
and spaces to provide comfort, safety,
and movement of information
Movement of information is main
distinction
Typically in state of flux due to frequent
technological changes
Relationship Chart
Value Closeness
Absolutely
1 A
necessary
President 2
Especially
O 3 E
important
Chief Technology Officer U 4
A A 5 I Important
Engineer’s area I I 6 O Ordinary OK
O I I 7
Secretary I I U 8 U Unimportant
A I O O 9 X Not desirable
Office entrance A E U O
X E E U
Central files U A O
O U I
Equipment cabinet O X
U A
Photocopy equipment E
E
Storage room Figure 9.1
Supermarket Retail Layout
Objective is to maximize
profitability per square foot of floor
space
Sales and profitability vary directly
with customer exposure
Five Helpful Ideas for
Supermarket Layout
1. Locate high-draw items around the
periphery of the store
2. Use prominent locations for high-impulse
and high-margin items
3. Distribute power items to both sides of an
aisle and disperse them to increase viewing
of other items
4. Use end-aisle locations
5. Convey mission of store through careful
positioning of lead-off department
Store Layout
Figure 9.2
Servicescapes
Ambient conditions - background
characteristics such as lighting, sound,
smell, and temperature
Spatial layout and functionality - which
involve customer circulation path
planning, aisle characteristics, and
product grouping
Signs, symbols, and artifacts -
characteristics of building design that
carry social significance
Retail Slotting
Manufacturers pay fees to retailers to
get the retailers to display (slot) their
product
Contributing factors
Limited shelf space
An increasing number of new products
Better information about sales through
POS data collection
Closer control of inventory
Retail Store Shelf Space
Planogram
5 facings
Computerized tool
for shelf-space
Shampoo
Shampoo
Shampoo
Shampoo
Shampoo
management
Generated from
store’s scanner
data on sales
Conditioner
Shampoo
Shampoo
Shampoo
Shampoo
Conditioner
Conditioner
Often supplied by
manufacturer
2 ft.
Warehousing and Storage
Layouts
Objective is to optimize trade-offs
between handling costs and costs
associated with warehouse space
Maximize the total “cube” of the
warehouse – utilize its full volume
while maintaining low material
handling costs
Warehousing and Storage
Layouts
Material Handling Costs
All costs associated with the transaction
Incoming transport
Storage
Finding and moving material
Outgoing transport
Equipment, people, material, supervision, insurance,
depreciation
Storage racks
Customization
Conveyor
Staging
Office
Shipping and receiving docks
Warehouse Layout
Cross-Docking Layout
Office
Shipping and receiving docks
Fixed-Position Layout
Product remains in one place
Workers and equipment come to
site
Complicating factors
Limited space at site
Different materials required at
different stages of the project
Volume of materials needed is
dynamic
Alternative Strategy
Laboratories
Figure 9.3
Process-Oriented Layout
Painting (2) 30 50 10 0
Receiving (4) 50 0
Shipping (5) 0
Testing (6)
Figure 9.4
Process Layout Example
Room 1 Room 2 Room 3
40’
= $570
Process Layout Example
Interdepartmental Flow Graph
100
50 30
1 2 3
10
100
4 5 6
50
Figure 9.6
Process Layout Example
n n
= $480
Process Layout Example
Interdepartmental Flow Graph
30
50 100
2 1 3
50 100
50
4 5 6
Figure 9.7
Process Layout Example
Room 1 Room 2 Room 3
40’
1 A A A A B B 1 D D D D B B
2 A A A A B B 2 D D D D B B
3 D D D D D D 3 D D D E E E
4 C C D D D D 4 C C D E E F
5 F F F F F D 5 A A A A A F
6 E E E E E D 6 A A A F F F
60
50
30
20
10
0
Assemble Paint Test Label Pack for
shipment
Operations
Staffing Work Cells Example
600 Mirrors per day required
Mirror production scheduled for 8 hours per day
From a work balance chart
total operation time = 140 seconds
= 140 / 48 = 2.91
Work Balance Charts
Used for evaluating operation times in
work cells
Can help identify bottleneck
operations
Flexible, cross-trained employees can
help address labor bottlenecks
Machine bottlenecks may require
other approaches
Focused Work Center and
Focused Factory
Focused Work Center
Identify a large family of similar products that have a large
and stable demand
Moves production from a general-purpose, process-
oriented facility to a large work cell
Focused Factory
A focused work cell in a separate facility
May be focused by product line, layout, quality, new
product introduction, flexibility, or other requirements
Focused Work Center and
Focused Factory
Work Cell Focused Work Center Focused Factory
Table 9.2
Repetitive and Product-
Oriented Layout
Organized around products or families of similar
high-volume, low-variety products
Volume is adequate for high equipment utilization
Product demand is stable enough to justify high investment in
specialized equipment
Product is standardized or approaching a phase of life cycle
that justifies investment
Supplies of raw materials and components are adequate and
of uniform quality
Product-Oriented Layouts
Fabrication line
Builds components on a series of machines
Machine-paced
Require mechanical or engineering changes to balance
Assembly line
Puts fabricated parts together at a series of workstations
Paced by work tasks
Balanced by moving tasks
Disadvantages
1. High volume is required
2. Work stoppage at any point ties up the whole operation
3. Lack of flexibility in product or production rates
Assembly-Line Balancing
Objective is to minimize the imbalance
between machines or personnel while
meeting required output
Starts with the precedence relationships
1. Determine cycle time
2. Calculate theoretical minimum number of
workstations
3. Balance the line by assigning specific tasks to
workstations
Copier Example
Performance Task Must Follow
Time Task Listed
Task (minutes) Below
A 10 —
B 11 A This means that
C 5 B tasks B and E
cannot be done
D 4 B until task A has
E 12 A been completed
F 3 C, D
G 7 F
H 11 E
I 3 G, H
Total time 66
Copier Example
Performance Task Must Follow
Time Task Listed
Task (minutes) Below
A 10 —
B 11 A
C 5 B
D 4 B
E 12 A
F 3 C, D 5
G 7 F 10 11
C
3 7
H 11 E
A B F G
I 3 G, H 4
3
Total time 66 12
D
11 I
E H
Figure 9.13
Copier Example
Performance Task Must Follow 480 available mins
Time Task Listed per day
Task (minutes) Below 40 units required
A 10 —
B 11 A Production time available
C 5 B per day
D 4 Cycle
B time = Units required per day
E 12 A = 480 / 40
F 3 C, D 5
= 12 minutes per unit
G 7 F 10 11
C
3 7
n
H 11 E ∑ BTime for task iF
Minimum A G
I 3 G, H i=1 4
number of = 3
Cycle time
Total time 66 workstations 12
D
11 I
= 66 / 12
E H
= 5.5 or 6 stations
Figure 9.13
Copier Example
Line-Balancing Heuristics