What is facilities planning?
Determine how an activity’s tangible fixed assets best support achieving the activity’s objective
What are factors impacting strategic facilities plan?
Number, location, size of warehouses
Centralized or decentralized storage of material
Reuse existing or build new facilities
Required flexibility w.r.t. market and technology
Interface between storage and manufacturing
Level of vertical integration
What are the steps to formulate a problem mathematically?
Step 1: Definition of variables
1a: decision needs to be made on? Express this by using e.g. x1, x2, etc. Clearly explain each variable.
1b: indicate valid range of all variables (integer, real, positive, negative, zero-one)
Step 2: Define Objective
2a: Choose between minimize and maximize
2b: What do you want to achieve? Express this mathematically by using variables and input data.
Step 3: Formulate all constraints
Develop mathematical relationships to describe constraints.
Use either <, >, =, ≤, or ≥
Clean up the formulas!
How to formulate an “either-or constraint’?
How does an ‘if then’ constraint look like?
Why facilities planning?
Proper facilities planning along the supply chain ensures that the product will follow the supply chain series buymake-move-store sell to the satisfaction of the ultimate customer.
What are important characteristics of facilities?
Flexibility
Modularity
Upgradability
Adaptability
Selective operability
Environmental and energy friendliness
What are the elements of the holistic approach for creating facilities?
Total integration—the integration of material and information flow in a true, top-down progression that begins with the customer.
Blurred boundaries—the elimination of the traditional customer/supplier and manufacturing/warehousing relationships, as well as those among order entry, service, manufacturing, and distribution.
Consolidation—the merging of similar and disparate business entities that results in fewer and stronger competitors, customers, and suppliers. Consolidation also includes the physical merging of sites, companies, and functions.
Reliability—the implementation of robust systems, redundant systems, and fault-tolerant systems to create very high levels of uptime.
Maintenance—a combination of preventive maintenance and predictive maintenance. Preventive maintenance is a continuous process that minimizes future maintenance problems. Predictive maintenance anticipates potential problems by sensing the operations of a machine or system.
Economic progressiveness—the adoption of innovative fiscal practices that integrate scattered information into a whole that may be used for decision making.
What does facilities planning?
Facilities planning determines how an activity’s tangible fixed assets best support achieving the activity’s objective.
For a manufacturing firm, facilities planning involves the determination of how the manufacturing facility best supports production
What subjects fall under facilities planning?
What is meant with location?
The location of the facility refers to its placement with respect to customers, suppliers, and other facilities with which it interfaces. Also, the location includes its placement and orientation on a specific plot of land
What is meant with the design component?
The design components of a facility consist of the facility systems, the layout, and the handling system
What are reasons for why the continuous improvement cycle is important?
Economic considerations force a constant reevaluation and recognition of existing systems, personnel, and equipment. New machines and processes render older models and methods obsolete
What factors motivate improving facilities planning?
Health considerations
Energy
Increased need for productivity and competitiveness
Risks for fire
Pilferage (diefstal)
How does the facilities planning process look like?
Define
Define (or redefine) the objective of the facility
Specify the primary and support activities to be performed in accomplishing the objective.
Analyze the problem
Determine the interrelationships among all activities.
Determine the space requirements for all activities
Generate alternative facilities plans
Evaluate the alternatives
Evaluate alternative facilities plans.
Evaluate alternative facilities plans
Select the preferred design
Implement the design
Maintain and adapt the facilities plan
As new requirements are placed on the facility, the overall facilities plan must be modified accordingly
Redefine the objective of the facility
What elements form the organization’s model of success?
Vision: A description of where you are headed
Mission: How to accomplish the vision
Requirement of Success: The science of your business
Guiding Principles: The values to be used while pursuing the vision
Evidence of Success: Measurable results that will demonstrate when an organization is moving toward its vision
Strategic facilities planning
There must be alignment between overall strategy and supply chain
How to assure that the objectives are effectively translated into action?
Use the three dimensions for improvement
Time is also very important
Supply chain synthesis
The facilities planning process should be integrated and not allow selfishness
In the facilities planning process, everyone involved should understand the energy of change and have a desire to harness this energy for the competitive advantage of the total pipeline.
Facilities planning should be a continuous improvement process
A proactive rather than a reactive role for facilities planning is recommended for facility planners
What is product design?
Product design involves both the determination of which products are to be produced and the detailed design of individual products
Why is it important the facilities planner is involved in product design?
The facilities planner must be aware of the degree of uncertainty that exists concerning the mission of the facility being planned, the specific activities to be performed, and the direction of those activities. Depending on the type of products being produced, the business philosophy concerning facilities, and such external factors as the economy, labor availability and attitudes, and competition, the occupants of a facility might change frequently or never change at all.
How to determine the design of a product
Use a Quality Function Deployment
Benchmarking (looking at competition
How are products then realised?
Using CAD, designers are able to make very detailed designs per part and test with these
With concurrent engineering, a simultaneous consideration in the design phase of lifecycle factors such as product, function, design, materials, manufacturing processes, testability, serviceability, quality, and reliability. As a result of this analysis, a less expensive but functionally equivalent product design might be identified.
What does a process planner do?
The process planner addresses who should do the processing; namely, should a particular product, subassembly, or part be produced in-house or subcontracted to an outside supplier or contractor? The “make-or-buy” decision is part of the process planning function.
What determines the scope and magnitude of activities within a manufacturing facility?
The scope and magnitude of activities within a manufacturing facility are dependent on the decisions concerning the level of vertical integration. Such decisions are often referred to as “make or-buy” decisions or “sourcing” decisions
How to make the make-or-buy decision?
What is the input for the facilities planner?
The input to the facilities planner is a listing of the items to be made and the items to be purchased. The listing often takes the form of a parts list or a bill of materials.
How to select the required process?
Such decisions are based on previous experiences, related requirements, available equipment, production rates, and future expectations. Therefore, it is not uncommon for different processes to be selected in different facilities to perform identical operations.
What contains the process identification?
Process identification consists of a description of what is to be accomplished. For a manufactured product, process identification consists of (a) a parts list indicating what is to be manufactured, (b) component part drawings describing each component, and (c) the quantities to be produced.
What is CAPP?
Computer aided process planning (CAPP) can be used to automate the manual planning process [8]. There are two types of CAPP systems:
variant
In a variant CAPP, standard process plans for each part family are stored within the computer and called up whenever required.
Less expensive
generative
In generative process planning, process plans are generated automatically for new components without requiring the existing plans.
What are the steps in the process selection procedure?
Step 1 of the procedure involves the determination of the operations required to produce each component
Step 2 involves the identification of various equipment types capable of performing elemental operations.
Step 3 includes the determination of unit production times and equipment utilizations for various elemental operations and alternative equipment types.
The utilizations are inputs into step 4 of the procedure
Step 5 involves an economic evaluation of alternative equipment types
The results of the economic evaluation along with intangible factors such as flexibility, versatility, reliability, maintainability, and safety serve as the basis for step 6.
How to determine the sequencing?
Use and assembly chart
The easiest method of constructing an assembly chart is to begin with the completed product and to trace the product disassembly back to its basic components.
Gives an overview of whats needed when
Operation process chart
Gives overview of flow in facilityT
The operation process chart can also include materials needed for the fabricated components. Just like operations times
The operation process chart can be complemented with transportations, storages, and delays (including distances and times) when the information is available. Such a chart is referred to as a flow process chart by some and a process chart by others
Precedence diagram
The precedence diagram is a directed network and is often used in project planning.
It establishes the precedence relationships that must be maintained in manufacturing and assembling a product. No additional constraints are implicitly imposed; no assumptions are made concerning which parts move to which parts; no material handling or layout decisions are implicit in the way the precedence diagram is constructed.
What tools can be useful for facilities planning efforts?
Affinity Diagram
Brainstorming with post its
Interrelationship Digraph
map the logical links among related items
Tree Diagram
The tree diagram is used to map in increasing detail the actions that need to be accomplished in order to achieve a general objective.
Matrix Diagram
The matrix diagram organizes information such as characteristics, functions, and tasks into sets of items to be compared.
Contingency Diagram
The contingency diagram, also known as the process decision program chart, maps conceivable events and contingencies that might occur during implementation.
Activity Network Diagram
The activity network diagram is used to develop a work schedule for the facilities design effort. This diagram is synonymous with the critical path method (CPM) graph.
Prioritization Matrix
The prioritization matrix can be used to judge the relative importance of each criterion as compared to the others.
What is a useful trick when there are multiple if’s and then’s
If (x1 <3 and x3 < x2), then (x1 < x4 and x4 < x2)
x3 - x1 <= Ma
x2 - x3 <= Mb
a+b <= 1+c
Last changed2 years ago