Title: Facilities%20Location,%20Layout%20and%20Planning
1- Facilities Location, Layout and Planning
2FACILITY PLANNING
- The placement of facility customers, suppliers,
other links in the supply chain - Resources
- Strategy 99cents Only example
- Access to customers
- Government impacts
3Objectives of Facility Layout
- Minimize material handling costs
- Utilize space efficiently
- Utilize labor efficiently
- Eliminate bottlenecks
- Facilitate communication and interaction between
workers, between workers and their supervisors,
or between workers and customers - Reduce manufacturing cycle time or customer
service time
4Objectives of Facility Layout
- Eliminate waste or redundant movement
- Facilitate the entry, exit, and placement of
material, products, or people - Incorporate safety and security measures
- Promote product and service quality
- Encourage proper maintenance activities
- Provide a visual control of operations or
activities - Provide flexibility to adapt to changing
conditions - Increase capacity
5Questions on Layout Planning
- How should the facility be laid out?
- Does my layout cause unnecessary movement/excess
travel time? - Does my work flow in a logical manner?
- Does size dictate layout or does layout/product
flow dictate the size?
6Basic Types of Layouts
- Process Layout
- Machines grouped by process they perform
- Product Layout
- Linear arrangement of workstations to produce a
specific product - Fixed Position Layout
- Used in projects where the product cannot be moved
7Manufacturing Process Layout
8Manufacturing Process Layout
9Manufacturing Process Layout
10A Product Layout
11Fixed-Position Layouts
- Typical of projects
- Equipment, workers, materials, other resources
brought to the site - Highly skilled labor
- Often low fixed
- Typically high variable costs
12Designing Process Layouts
- Minimize material handling costs
- Block Diagramming
- Minimize nonadjacent loads
- Use when quantitative data is available
- Relationship Diagramming
- Based on location preference between areas
- Use when quantitative data is not available
13Block Diagramming
- Create load summary chart
- Calculate composite (two way) movements
- Develop trial layouts minimizing number of
nonadjacent loads - Example
14(No Transcript)
15Relationship Diagramming(Murthers Grid)
- Used when quantitative data is not available
- Muthers grid displays preferences
- Denote location preferences with weighted lines
16Relationship Diagramming Example
17Relationship Diagramming Example
- A Absolutely necessary
- E Especially important
- I Important
- O Okay
- U Unimportant
- X Undesirable
18Relationship Diagramming Example
- 1 Absolutely necessary
- 2 Especially important
- 3 Important
- 4 Okay
- 5 Unimportant
- 6 Undesirable
19(No Transcript)
20 21Types Of Facilities
- Heavy manufacturing
- Auto plants, steel mills, chemical plants
- Light industry
- Small components mfg, assembly
- Warehouse distribution centers
- Retail service
22Factors in Heavy Manufacturing Location
- Construction costs
- Land costs
- Raw material and finished goods shipment modes
- Proximity to raw materials
- Utilities
- Labor availability
23Factors in Light Industry Location
- Construction costs
- Land costs
- Easily accessible geographic region
- Education training capabilities
24Factors in Warehouse Location
- Transportation costs
- Proximity to markets (Customers)
25(No Transcript)
26(No Transcript)
27Service Location Considerations
- Labor
- Cost of Living
- Real Estate
- Construction
- Government Incentives
- Examples Amoco, Mass St, Tattoo Parlors,
Walgreens
28Global Location Factors
- Government stability
- Government regulations
- Political and economic systems
- Economic stability and growth
- Exchange rates
- Culture
- Climate
- Export import regulations, duties and tariffs
- Raw material availability
- Number and proximity of suppliers
- Transportation and distribution system
- Labor cost and education
- Available technology
- Commercial travel
- Technical expertise
- Cross-border trade regulations
- Group trade agreements
29Regional Location Factors
- Community government
- Local business regulations
- Government services
- Business climate
- Community services
- Taxes
- Availability of sites
- Financial Services
- Community inducements
- Proximity of suppliers
- Education system
30Site Location Factors
- Customer base
- Construction/ leasing cost
- Land cost
- Site size
- Transportation
- Utilities
- Zoning restrictions
- Traffic
- Safety/security
- Competition
- Area business climate
- Income level
31Location Incentives
- Tax credits Wal-Mart in Wyandotte
- Relaxed government regulation
- Job training
- Infrastructure improvement
- Money
32Center-of-Gravity Technique
- Locate facility at center of geographic area
- Based on weight and distance traveled
- Establish grid-map of area
- Identify coordinates and weights shipped for
each location
33Facility Summary
- Why is it important?
- Location analysis
- Location Criteria global, local, regional -
education - Location and Strategy
- Location and Customers
- Layout planning
34Project Managementand Operations
35First Essay on Project Management 1697 An
Essay Upon Projects 1959 HBR Article The
Project Manager Air Force Manual 1964
36Project Management
In todays global marketplace, complexity and
speed are certainties. In such an environment, a
good axiom for project management is, Do It, Do
It Right, Do It Right Now. Creating clear
direction, efficiency, timely response, and
quality outcomes requires project managers who
are agile -- adept at change. The associated
disciplinary areas are clearly spelled out in the
following PMI definition.Project management is
the application of knowledge, skills, tools, and
techniques to a broad range of activities in
order to meet the requirements of a particular
project. Project management is comprised of five
Project Management Process Groups Initiating
Processes, Planning Processes, Executing
Processes, Monitoring and Controlling Processes,
and Closing Processes.
Source Project Management Institute -
http//www.pmi.org/info/PP_AboutProfessionOverview
.asp?nav0501
37Elements of Project Management
- Project team
- Individuals from different departments within
company - Matrix organization
- Team structure with members from different
functional areas depending on skills needed - Project manager - Leader of project team
- Project Charter high level description of what
is to be accomplished in a project and delegates
authority to project manager to implement actions
to complete project
38Project Planning
- Statement of work
- Written description of goals, work time frame
of project - Activities require labor, resources time
- Precedence relationship shows sequential
relationship of project activities
39Elements of Project Planning
- Define project objective(s)
- Identify activities
- Establish precedence relationships
- Make time estimates
- Determine project completion time
- Compare project schedule objectives
- Determine resource requirements to meet objective
40Work Breakdown Structure
- Hierarchical organization of work to be done on a
project - Project broken down into modules
- Modules subdivided into subcomponents,
activities, and tasks - Identifies individual tasks, workloads, and
resource requirements
41Project Control
- All activities identified and included
- Completed in proper sequence
- Resource needs identified
- Schedule adjusted
- Maintain schedule and budget
- Complete on time
42A Gantt Chart
Around since 1914
- Popular tool for project scheduling
- Graph with bar for representing the time for each
task - Provides visual display of project schedule
- Also shows slack for activities
- Amount of time activity can be delayed without
delaying project
43Gantt Charts
- Gantt described two principles for his charts
- measure activities by the amount of time needed
to complete them - the space on the chart can be used the represent
the amount of the activity that should have been
done in that time.
Gantt charts were employed on major
infrastructure projects including the Hoover Dam
and Interstate highway system and still are an
important tool in project management.
44A Gantt Chart
Figure 6.2
45CPM/PERT
- Critical Path Method (CPM)
- DuPont Remington-Rand (1956)
- Deterministic task times
- Project Eval. Review Technique (PERT)
- US Navy, Lockheed
- Multiple task time estimates
46PERT/CPM
Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT)
developed in conjunction with the development of
the Polaris missile program for submarines
developed by the US Navy with Lockheed as the
lead contractor Critical Path Method (CPM)
developed through a joint venture between the
DuPont Corporation and the Remington Rand
Corporation the original purpose was to monitor
and evaluate plant maintenance management
projects.
47Project Network for a House
Figure 6.4
48Critical Path
- A path is a sequence of connected activities
running from start to end node in network - The critical path is the path with the longest
duration in the network - Project cannot be completed in less than the
time of the critical path
49The Critical Path
- A 1-2-3-4-6-73 2 0 3 1 9 months
- B 1-2-3-4-5-6-73 2 0 1 1 1 8 months
- C 1-2-4-6-73 1 3 1 8 months
- D 1-2-4-5-6-73 1 1 1 1 7 months
50The Critical Path
Activity Start Times
Figure 6.6
51Project Crashing
- Crashing is reducing project time by expending
additional resources - Crash time is an amount of time an activity is
reduced - Crash cost is the cost of reducing the activity
time - Goal is to reduce project duration at minimum cost
52Time-Cost Relationship
- Crashing costs increase as project duration
decreases - Indirect costs increase as project duration
increases - Reduce project length as long as crashing costs
are less than indirect costs
53Life Cycle Management
- Long term view of projects to guide decision
making solutions that provide life time success
vice short term - Acquisition development production
introduction sustainment disposal - Links system costs to big picture better use of
resources minimize total cost of ownership
54- Capacity and Aggregate Planning
55Capacity Outputs Examples
56The goal of capacity planning decisions
- The capacity of the firm to produce the service
or good - The processes for providing the service or making
the good - The layout or arrangement of the work space
- The design of work processes to enhance
productivity
57Capacity
- The max output that an organization be capable of
producing - Measure a single facility
- Design vs. Effective capacity
- Capacity Utilization design vs. efficient
utilization - For systems have more than one facility and flows
of product - System capacity and bottleneck
- Improve system capacity
58Determinants of Effective Capacity
- Facilities
- Human considerations
- Adding people
- Increasing employee motivation
- Operations
- Improving operating rate of a machine
- Improving quality of raw materials and components
- External forces
- Safety regulations
59Capacity Utilization
- Measures how much of the available capacity is
actually being used - Always lt1(percentage of usage)
- Higher the better
- Denominator
- If effective capacity used efficient utilization
- If design capacity used design utilization
60Aggregate Planning
- The process of planning the quantity and timing
of output over the intermediate range (3-18
months) by adjusting production rate, employment,
inventory - Master Production Schedule formalizes the
production plan and translates it into specific
end item requirements over the short to
intermediate horizon
61Capacity Planning
- The process of determining the amount of capacity
required to produce in the future. May be at the
aggregate or product line level - Master Production Schedule - anticipated build
schedule - Time horizon must exceed lead times for materials
62Capacity Planning
- Look at lead times, queue times, set up times,
run times, wait times, move times - Resource availability
- Material and capacity - should be in synch
- driven by dispatch list - listing of
manufacturing orders in priority sequence - ties
to layout planning - load profiles - capacity of each section
63the capacity decisions
- When to add capacity
- How much capacity to add
- Where to add capacity
- What type of capacity to add
- When to reduce capacity
64Capacity Planning
- Rough Cut Capacity Planning - process of
converting the master production schedule into
requirements for key resources - capacity requirements plan - time-phased display
of present and future capacity required on all
resources based on planned and released orders
65Capacity Planning
- Capacity Requirements Planning (CRP) - process of
determining in detail the amount of labor and
machine resources required to meet production
plan - RCCP may indicate sufficient capacity but the CRP
may indicate insufficient capacity during
specific time periods
66Theory of Constraints
- Every system has a bottle neck
- capacity of the system is constrained by the
capacity of the bottle neck - increasing capacity at other than bottle neck
operations does not increase the overall capacity
of the system
67Theory of Constraints
- What needs to be changed
- What to change to
- How to make the change happen
68Theory of Constraints
- Identify the constraint
- Subordinate
- Inertia
- Walk the process again
- inertia of change can create new bottle necks
69Capacity Planning
- Establishes overall level of productive resources
- Affects lead time responsiveness, cost
competitiveness - Determines when and how much to increase capacity
70Capacity Expansion
- Volume certainty of anticipated demand
- Strategic objectives for growth
- Costs of expansion operation
- Incremental or one-step expansion
71Sales and Operations Planning (SOP)
- Brings together all plans for business
- performed at least once a month
- Internal and external
72Adjusting Capacity to Meet Demand
- Producing at a constant rate and using inventory
to absorb fluctuations in demand (level
production) - Hiring and firing workers to match demand (chase
demand) - Maintaining resources for high demand levels
- Increase or decrease working hours (overtime and
undertime) - Subcontracting work to other firms
- Using part-time workers
- Providing the service or product at a later time
period (backordering)
73Demand Management
- Shift demand into other periods
- Incentives, sales promotions, advertising
campaigns - Offer product or services with countercyclical
demand patterns - Partnering with suppliers to reduce information
distortion along the supply chain
74Remedies for Underloads
- Acquire more work
- Pull work ahead that is scheduled for later time
periods - Reduce normal capacity
75Remedies for Overloads
- Eliminate unnecessary requirements
- Reroute jobs to alternative machines or work
centers - Split lots between two or more machines
- Increase normal capacity
- Subcontract
- Increase the efficiency of the operation
- Push work back to later time periods
- Revise master schedule
76Scheduling as part of the Planning Process
77Scheduling
- Scheduling is the last step in the planning
process? - It is one of the most challenging areas of
operations management. - Scheduling presents many day-to-day problems for
operations managers because of - Changes in customer orders
- Equipment breakdowns
- Late deliveries from suppliers
- A myriad of other disruptions
78Objectives in Scheduling
- Meet customer due dates
- Minimize job lateness
- Minimize response time
- Minimize completion time
- Minimize time in the system
- Minimize overtime
- Maximize machine or labor utilization
- Minimize idle time
- Minimize work-in-process inventory
- Efficiency
79Sequencing Rules
- FCFS - first-come, first-served
- LCFS - last come, first served
- DDATE - earliest due date
- CUSTPR - highest customer priority
- SETUP - similar required setups
- SLACK - smallest slack
- CR - critical ratio
- SPT - shortest processing time
- LPT - longest processing time
80Critical Ratio Rule
Ties scheduling to Gantt Chart or PERT/CPM