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Facility Design-Week 1 Introduction to Facility Planning

Facility Design-Week 1 Introduction to Facility Planning. Anastasia L. Maukar. Definition of Factory. Factory/Plant:. MACHINES/ EQUIPMENTS. RESOURCES. MAN. PRODUCTION SYSTEM. MATERIAL. ENERGY. INFORMATION. MONEY. FINISHED GOODS. Factory/plant. Facilities Planning.

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Facility Design-Week 1 Introduction to Facility Planning

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  1. Facility Design-Week 1Introduction to Facility Planning Anastasia L. Maukar

  2. Definition of Factory Factory/Plant:

  3. MACHINES/ EQUIPMENTS RESOURCES MAN PRODUCTION SYSTEM MATERIAL ENERGY INFORMATION MONEY FINISHED GOODS Factory/plant

  4. Facilities Planning • Facilities planning determines how an activity’s tangible fixed assets best support achieving the activity's objectives

  5. Facilities Planning • Examples: a. In manufacturing, the objective is to support production. b. In an airport, the objective is to support the passenger airplane interface. c. In a hospital, the objective is to provide medical care to patients.

  6. Facility Planning Structural Design Facility Location Facility Design Layout Design Handling System Design Facility Planning-Hierarchy

  7. Facility Planning Location : is the placement of a facility with respect to customers, suppliers, and other facilities with which it interfaces. Structure : consists of the building and services (e.g., gas, water, power, heat, light, air, sewage). Layout :consists of all equipment, machinery, and furnishings within the structure. Handling System :consists of the mechanism by which all interactions required by the layout are satisfied (e.g., materials, personnel, information, and equipment handling systems).

  8. Typical Design and Planning Problems

  9. Facility Planning Objectives 1. Support the organization's mission through improved material handling, materials control, and good housekeeping. 2. Effectively utilize people, equipment, space, and energy. 3. Minimize capital investment. 4. Be flexible and promote ease of maintenance. 5. Provide for employee safety and job satisfaction.

  10. Issues in Facilities Design • Minimize investment in new equipment • Maximize production throughput rate • Utilize space most efficiently • Provide for the safety and comfort of employees • Maintain a flexible arrangement • Minimize materials handling cost • Facilitate the manufacturing process • Facilitate the organizational structure

  11. Facility Plant Layout • Facility layout: Arrangement of machines, storage areas, and/or work areas usually within the confines of a physical structure, such as a retail store, an office, a warehouse, or a manufacturing facility. • for the location of all machines, utilities, employee workstations, customer service areas, material storage areas, aisles, restrooms, lunchrooms, internal walls, offices, and computer rooms • for the flow patterns of materials and people around, into, and within buildings

  12. Why is facilities layout important? 20-75% of product cost attributed to materials handling (Sule, 1991 and Tompkins et al. 2003) Layout of facilities affects materials handling costs Facilities includes machines, departments, workstations, locker rooms, service areas, etc. “You can make as many mistakes as you want in layout planning, and they’ll all any for themselves if they avoid mistakes in the physical installation”

  13. Types of layout problems Layout of a service system Layout of a manufacturing facility Warehouse layout Nontraditional layout

  14. Applications Manufacturing Healthcare Service Restaurants Banks Airports Entertainment Logistics and Distribution Ports/Terminals Distribution Centers

  15. Service Layout Problem • Minimize transportation among personnel • Communication and privacy • Conform building codes • Safety & securityfor the personnel

  16. Video Retail/Service Layout • Designmaximizesproductexposuretocustomers • Decision variables • Storeflowpattern • Allocation of (shelf) spacetoproducts • Types • Griddesign • Free-flowdesign

  17. Service system layout – Grocery store

  18. Operations review for office layouts (Suskind, 1989) Is the company outgrowing its space? Is available space too expensive? Is building in the proper location? How will a new layout affect the organization and service? Are office operations too centralized or decentralized? Does the office structure support the strategic plan? Is the new layout in tune with the company’s image Does customer physically participate in service delivery?

  19. Office structures Closed structure Semiclosed structure Open structure Semiopen structure

  20. Closed structure

  21. Semiclosed structure Teller Teller Teller

  22. Open structure

  23. Semiopen structure

  24. Service Layout

  25. Service Industry - Bank

  26. Manufacturing layout Minimize transportation cost of raw materials, sub-assemblies, work-in-process inventory, tools, parts, finished products, etc. Facilitate traffic flow Improve employee morale Minimize or eliminate risk of injury and property damage Ease of supervision and face-to-face communication

  27. Assembly facility layout

  28. Driveway layout

  29. Warehouse layout

  30. Warehouse layout Warehouse isafacility for storing merchandise, commoditiesorotheritems 4mainwarehousefunctions 1. Receiving 2. Storing 3. Orderpicking 4. Shipping

  31. Warehouse layout • Where to locate receiving and shipping functions? • Should the two functions be combined at one location or separated?

  32. Warehouse Layout Problem • Goal: utilize space effectively to minimize storage and material handling cost(MHC).

  33. Warehouse Layout Problem • Factor: shape and size of aisle, warehouse height, location and orientation of docking area, types of rack, storage & retrieval automation • .

  34. Warehouse Layout Problem • Shape and size of aisle factor • MH equipment/ device • Types of rack

  35. Warehouse Layout

  36. Nontraditional layout Keyboard layout IC board layout Computer disk storage layout Airport gate layout

  37. Non Traditional Layout Problem • Ex: Control panel LP in the design of a computer backboard.

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