Chap 4 - Facility Layout: Manufacturing and Services.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Agenda of Week IX. Capacity and Process Capacity planning Midterm exam Capacity planning Review of week 8 12 Approaches Purposes : Finishing the capacity.
Advertisements

Agenda of Week X. Layout Capacity planning Process selection Linebalancing Review of week 9 13 Approaches Purposes : Finishing the capacity planning Understanding.
TOPIC :CAPACITY AND FACILITIES
Facilities Planning - Unit 04 Layout Types: Manufacturing
Process Selection and Facility Layout
1 IRWIN  a Times Mirror Higher Education Group, Inc. company, 1996 Facilities Layout.
Process Selection and Facility Layout
Location Strategy and Layout Strategy
Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Operations Management
6-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Operations Management, Seventh Edition, by William J. Stevenson Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Layout Strategy. Introduction What – Layout Decisions Where – For efficiency or customer appeal Why – Improve Profitability.
Process Selection and Facility Layout
1 Facility Design-Week 1 Introduction to Facility Planning Anastasia L. Maukar.
Manufacturing Engineering Department Lecture 1 - Introduction
Session Pooja patnaik.
6-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Operations Management, Seventh Edition, by William J. Stevenson Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Process Selection and Facility Layout
MultiMedia by Stephen M. Peters© 2002 South-Western Operations Management.
Facility layout.
Chapter 10 – Facility Layout
Manufacturing and Services
Layout Strategy.
Process (Job Shop) Layouts
Facility Design and Layout
Chapter 11 Production and Operations Management Learning Goals
22/04/2017 Process selection.
Chapter 10 – Facility Layout
Chapter 9 : Layout Strategies
Facility Layout Chapter 10 pages , ,
6-1Process Selection and Facility Layout William J. Stevenson Operations Management 8 th edition.
Facility Layout Chapter 10 pages ,
1 Facility Layout: Manufacturing and Services Manufacturing and Services Chapter 5, Part B.
Manufacturing Systems Manufacturing System Design & Control.
MTSU Facility Layout Arrangement of Manufacturing and Services Processes Arrangement of Manufacturing and Services Processes.
Slide 0 of 96 Manufacturing Facility Layout. Slide 1 of 96 Basic Layout Forms Process Product Cellular Fixed position Hybrid.
11-IE IE IE-60  Facilities design for manufacturing systems is extremely important because of the economic dependence of the firm.  Facility.
Chapter 6 Facilities Layout.
Slide 0 of 96 Chapter 8 Facility Layout: Manufacturing and Services Manufacturing and Services Honey Arora MBA – III.
PLANT LAYOUT. Definitions In the words of James Lundy, 'Plant layout identically involves the allocation of space and the arrangement of equipments in.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 6 Process Selection and Facilities Layout.
Process Selection and Facility Layout Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written.
6 Process Selection and Facility Layout. 6-2 Learning Objectives  Explain the strategic importance of process selection.  Describe the basic processing.
Facility Layout Chapter 10 pages , ,
Facility Layout Part b.
Aim - Customer satisfaction at optimum cost. PRODUCTION MANAGMENT.
Basic Layout Types Product layouts Process layouts
Laljibhai Chaturbhai Institute of Technology. Bhandu Affiliated to Gujarat Technological University, Ahmadabad Sub: Engineering Economics & Management.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 8 Facility Layout.
Part 3.
Manufacturing And Service processes
FACILITY LAYOUT & LOCATION PROF. DR. ORHAN TORKUL M. RAŞİT CESUR.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 6 Process Selection and Facilities Layout.
6-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Operations Management, Seventh Edition, by William J. Stevenson Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Facility Layout Chapter 10 pages , ,
Chapter 3 MANAGING THE TRANSFORMATION PROCESS
Process Layout Chapter #6.
UNIT-III Operations Management PREPARED BY CH. AVINASH.
Cellular Layouts Cellular Production Group Technology
Facility Layout McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Process Selection and Facility Layout
What is Facility Layout?  The layout facility is the physical location of the various departments/units of the facility within the premises of the facility.
FACILITY LAYOUT Facility layout means:
Process Selection and Facility Layout
Facility Layout Configuration of departments, work centres and equipment, with particular emphasis on movement of work through the system Why Important?
Chapter 6A Facility Layout 2.
Facilities Planning and Design Course code:
Process Selection and Facility Layout Lecture 5. Forecasting Product and Service Design Technological Change Capacity Planning Process Selection Facilities.
Process Selection and Facility Layout
Copyright ©2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved
Presentation transcript:

Chap 4 - Facility Layout: Manufacturing and Services

Introduction Facility layout means planning:  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  infrastructure services such as the delivery of line communications, energy, and water and the removal of waste water all make up basic utilities.

Locate All Areas In and Around Buildings Equipment Work stations Material storage Rest/break areas Utilities Eating areas Aisles Offices

Characteristics of the Facility Layout Decision Location of these various areas impacts the flow through the system. The layout can affect productivity and costs generated by the system. Layout alternatives are limited by  the amount and type of space required for the various areas  the amount and type of space available  the operations strategy... more

Characteristics of the Facility Layout Decision Layout decisions tend to be:  Infrequent  Expensive to implement  Studied and evaluated extensively  Long-term commitments

Objectives of the Layout Strategy Develop an economical layout which will meet the requirements of: product design and volume (product strategy) Process equipment and capacity (process strategy) quality of work life (human resource strategy) building and site constraints (location strategy)

Requirements of a Good Layout A good layout requires: 4 an understanding of capacity & space requirements 4 selection of appropriate material handling equipment 4 decisions regarding environment and aesthetics 4 identification and understanding of the requirements for information flow 4 identification of the cost of moving between the various work areas

Inputs to the Layout Decision 1. Specification of objectives of the system in terms of output and flexibility. 2. Estimation of product or service demand on the system. 3. Processing requirements in terms of number of operations and amount of flow between departments and work centers. 4. Space requirements for the elements in the layout. 5. Space availability within the facility itself.

Slide 8 of 96 Manufacturing Facility Layouts

Basic Layout Forms Process Product Cellular Fixed position Hybrid (mixed)

Process (Job Shop) Layouts Used when the operations system must handle a wide variety of products in relatively small volumes (i.e., flexibility is necessary) Designed to facilitate processing items or providing services that present a variety of processing requirements. The layouts include departments or other functional groupings in which similar kinds of activities are performed. A manufacturing example of a process layout is the machine shop, which has separate departments for milling, grinding, drilling, and so on.

Characteristics of Process Layouts General-purpose equipment is used Changeover is rapid Material handling equipment is flexible Operators are highly skilled Technical supervision is required Planning, scheduling and controlling functions are challenging Production time is relatively long In-process inventory is relatively high

Product (Assembly Line) Layouts Product layouts are used to achieve a smooth and rapid flow of large volumes of products or customers through a system. A job is divided into a series of standardized tasks, permitting specialization of both labor and equipment. The large volumes handled by these systems usually make it economical to invest huge amount of money in equipment and job design.

Product (Assembly Line) Layouts… For instance, if a portion of a manufacturing operation required the sequence of cutting, sanding, and painting, the appropriate pieces of equipment would be arranged in that same sequence. Operations are arranged in the sequence required to make the product Product layouts achieve a high degree of labor and equipment utilization.

Characteristics of Product Layouts Special-purpose equipment are used Changeover is expensive and lengthy Material flow is continuous Material handling equipment is fixed Little direct supervision is required Planning, scheduling and controlling functions are relatively straight-forward Production time for a unit is relatively short In-process inventory is relatively low

Cellular Manufacturing (CM) Layouts Cellular manufacturing is a type of layout in which machines are grouped into what is referred to as a cell. Groupings are determined by the operations needed to perform work for a set of similar items, or part families that require similar processing.

Cellular Manufacturing (CM) Layouts… These relate to the grouping of equipment and include faster processing time, less material handling, less work-in-process inventory, and reduced setup time. Used when the operations system must handle a moderate variety of products in moderate volumes

Fixed-Position Layouts In fixed-position layouts, the item being worked on remains stationary, and workers, materials, and equipment are moved as needed. Fixed-position layouts are used in large construction projects (buildings, power plants, and dams), shipbuilding, and production of large aircraft and space mission rockets. Fixed-position layouts are widely used for farming, firefighting, road building, home building, remodeling and repair, and drilling for oil.

Hybrid (mixed) Layouts Actually, most manufacturing facilities use a combination of layout types. An example of a hybrid layout is where departments are arranged according to the types of processes but the products flow through on a product layout.

Hybrid (mixed) Layouts… For instance, supermarket layouts are fundamentally of a process nature, and however we find most use fixed-path material-handling devices such as roller-type conveyors both in the stockroom and at checkouts, and belt-type conveyors at the cash registers. Hospitals also use the basic process arrangement, although frequently patient care involves more of a fixed-position approach, in which nurses, doctors, medicines, and special equipment are brought to the patient.

New Trends in Manufacturing Layouts Designed for quality and flexibility Ability to quickly shift to different product models or to different production rates Cellular layout within larger process layouts Automated material handling U-shaped production lines More open work areas with fewer walls, partitions, or other obstacles Smaller and more compact factory layouts Less space provided for storage of inventories throughout the layout

Product Layout-Advantages/Disadvantages Advantages: ù Low cost variable cost per unit ù Lower material handling costs ù reduction in work in- process inventories ù easier training and supervision Disadvantages: ÷ High volume required because of large initial investment ÷ Work stoppage at any point ties up the whole process ÷ Lack of flexibility in handling variety of products or production rates