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Abattoir Design

The document discusses the key components and design considerations for a modern abattoir. An integrated abattoir for meat export would require around 50 acres of land and have a daily processing capacity of 1000 buffaloes and 10,000 sheep/goats. The abattoir layout is designed to allow for the humane slaughter and hygienic production of meat. Key components include a stockyard, lairage area to hold livestock for 2-3 days, slaughter halls separated for different animal types, and cold storage facilities like chilling rooms and freezers.

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Tanmoy Pramanik
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
819 views

Abattoir Design

The document discusses the key components and design considerations for a modern abattoir. An integrated abattoir for meat export would require around 50 acres of land and have a daily processing capacity of 1000 buffaloes and 10,000 sheep/goats. The abattoir layout is designed to allow for the humane slaughter and hygienic production of meat. Key components include a stockyard, lairage area to hold livestock for 2-3 days, slaughter halls separated for different animal types, and cold storage facilities like chilling rooms and freezers.

Uploaded by

Tanmoy Pramanik
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MODERN ABATTOIR DESIGN

Maximum number of animals and kind of animals to be slaughtered


per day is taken into account for layout of plant. During designing an
abattoir, we have to consider the purpose of the abattoir, whether it is
meant for slaughter and dressing of the animals only or it requires full
processing of animals including byproduct processing.

An integrated modem abattoir for export of meat would require


around fifty acres of land for lairage, slaughter halls for buffaloes,
sheep and goat, chilling, deboning, freezing and cold storage. The
capacity of daily production may be around 1000 buffaloes and 10000
sheep/goat. Abattoir for about 400 capacity and 800 capacity animals
per day would require two to four acres of land. Careful consideration
is to be given to the size and location. 

Smaller plant can be set up close to production area and hence would
be economical compared to large meat plants, which are expensive.
Many large plants under utilize their capacity due to various reasons
such as transport cost, non-availability of enough livestock in and
around the location. 

The abattoir shall have the following facilities: 

a) Resting places for animals before slaughter. 


b) Ante-mortem inspection. 
c) Carrying out humane slaughter. 
d) Flaying, dressing and washing of the carcass. 
e) Handling by-products.
f) Inspection of meat and disposal of meat unfit for human
consumption.
g) Laboratory. 
h) Staf-welfare
i) Segregation ward for sick/diseased animals. 
j) Adequate water supply. 

Abattoir shall have an adequate separation between clean and unclean


section. The sections should be arranged in such a way that from the
introduction of a live animal into the abattoir up to the emergence of
meat and offal classed as fit for consumption, there shall be a
continuous process, without any possibility of reversal, inter-section
or over lapping between the live animals and meat, and between meat
and by-products or waste.

 Main Components of An Abattoir :

The modern abattoir layout is as follows keeping in view humane


method of slaughter and hygienic, wholesome and safe meat
production.

(i) Stockyard: It is meant for collection and marketing of livestock in


a large number. It should be roofed to protect animals and staff. There
should be facility to unload the stock particularly from lorries. All the
stock must be handled gently and quietly. As per nature animals
prefer walking up slopes rather than down steep gradients and it
should be kept in mind while designing stock yard. Stock yard should
have enough open area for vehicle turn and usually should be located
opposite to the side from where processed product I meat is
despatched. Here the animals are examined by veterinarian before
sending to lairage. Unless all animals are arriving on hoof, proper
ramps for direct unloading of animals from trucks or railway wagons
should be provided and the ramps should directly Plant Layout,
Design and Construction of An Abattoir lead to ante-mortem area
with office room for veterinary inspector. This area should have water
and feeding facilities. There should be separate isolation pens with
watering and feeding arrangements for (i) animals suspected to be
suffering from contagious and infections diseases and (ii) fractious
animals in order to segregate them from the remaining animals.
Suspected animals are sent to isolation pen directly from stockyard.
This area also should have water and feeding facilities. 

(ii)lairage: It is meant to keep two to three days stock for slaughter.


After passing through reception area the animals reach to the lairage
where these are rested before slaughter. The rest is being given to
restore their normal physiological condition. Usually animals travel
long distances to reach abattoir and if not rested properly the quality
of meat is adversely affected. The lairage should be equipped with all
facilities to feel animal comfortable and for this it should be protected
from heat, cold and rain. It should be spacious enough (2.8m^2f of
each large animal and 1.6m2f or small animals) to accommodate the
large animals that will be slaughtered in 2 days and small animals for
one day slaughter. Lairage should be provided with abundant water
and feed. This section should be so constructed that the animals can
be kept separately depending upon their type and class. The lairage
should have adequate facilities for ante-mortem inspection. There
should also be the separate isolation pens for suspected and fractious
animals as in case of stockyard. Where separate lairages are to be
provided for livestock meant for different method of slaughter like
Halal, Jhatka or Jewish slaughter, complete visual separation shall be
effected and entrances shall be kept as far apart as possible.
(iii) Slaughter househall: From lairage, animals are transferred to
slaughter hall, which is usually situated at a distance of 10 meter from
lairage. Wherever required, separate provisions for slaughtering,
dressing and processing of small animals and also for slaughtering of
animals under different slaughter method should be made in an
abattoir. Exits to such sections should be kept as far apart as possible.
It has several sections:

a) Drive/races: Firstly, the animals reach to holding pen and then they
are driven to stunning pen through drive/races. Drive is usually a
curved path with single file accommodation and stop gate. Animals
are continuously being guided by a person to stunning pen.

b) Stunning pen: It is the area where animals are made unconscious


before killing. Its design depends on type of stunning procedure to be
followed.

c) Bleeding area: Immediately after stunning, the animal has to be


bled to death. This area should possess a good gradient for collection
of blood. This area should be so located that the blood shall not be
splashed on other animals being slaughtered or on the carcass being
skinned. Blood drain and collection should be immediate and proper.
The minimum diameter of the blood drain shall be 150 mm and-shall
be sloped not less than 170 mm per meter to the discharge point. The
bleeding trough for large animals shall be at least  1.5 m wide and
1.1-1.2 m for small animals and swine. It should be enclosed on both
sides and shall have a smooth impervious surface such as stainless
steel. For small stock bleeding area,galvanized steel or aluminium
grating shall be provided.For large animals,the overhead bleeding rail
should be there. A hand wash basin and knife sterilizer should be
provided in this area for the sticker to sterilize knife.

d) Carcass dressing area: In this area a number of operations are


carried out such as removal of hide and skin, head removal,
evisceration, splitting, trimming and final wash etc. Dressing of
carcass should not be done on floor. Adequate means for immediate
disposal of hides or skins should be provided. The hides and skins,
should never be spread on slaughter floor for inspection. There should
be provisions for immediate disposal of legs, horns, hooves etc. Floor
wash point, adequate number of hand wash basins with sterilizers and
hot and cold water outlets should be provided in this area Sufficient
space should be provided for the deborning, removal and thorough
washing of heads. If pigs are slaughtered, then the swine scalding tank
and dehairing equipment should be separated from the rest of the
dressing area. The scalding tank should be equipped with overflow
facilities. For a slaughter house with higher slaughter rate (25 or more
cattle/hr or 150 or more swine/hr), a moving top evisceration table
should be provided with cold water sprays to remove blood and
extraneous material and be synchronized with the eviscerating rail.
This also should be installed together with the facilities for the
systematic removal of all organs and parts. There should be facilities
such as racks or trays or equivalent means to accommodate and
maintain the identity of organs and parts detained for veterinary
diagnosis.

e) Inspection area: Before evisceration the carcass has to be examined


carefully for any pathological lesions. Once the carcass is ready for
sending to the next section all its visceral organ and the whole
eviscerated carcass are reexamined carefully. Then, it is decided
whether the carcass has to be sent to chilling section or condemned
meat room or detention room, Adequate facilities and space should be
there for inspection of the viscera of various types of animals
slaughtered. Hand wading, tool sterilization, floor washing and
facilities for separation and disposal of condemned material should be
provided in this area. Adequate arrangements for identification,
inspection and correlation of carcass, viscera and head should be
made there.

f) Carcass washing area: A separately drained area or an area of


sufficient size slopped to a floor drain should be provided for washing
of the approved carcasses with a jet of water. This area should be well
curbed
(iv) Cold storage: If the meat is to be consumed immediately after
dressing i.e., in hot condition, the carcass has to be sent immediately
for sale and cooking. Otherwise in all other cases carcass should be
chilled soon after the postmortem inspection. As per EEC regulation,
chilling temperature for carcass should not exceed 70°C while for
offal it should be below 40°C. Chilling is practiced to set up the meat
firmly and check any microbial growth. The carcass is held in chilling
room for three days and this process is also known as ageing. All blast
freezers and holding freezers should be capable of maintaining
temperature of - 25°C or lower and -18°C or lower respectively.
There should be provision for measuring relative humidity and
temperature. Chill doors should be sliding or single or double-hinged.
Internal finishing shall be durable, impervious and with good
insulation and floor drainage. All freezers should be equipped with
thermographs an facilities for securing with locks.An area in the
cooler shall be provided for the chilling and storage of detained
carcasses and parts, This area Should be segregated from the
remainder of the cooler and shall be equipped with seal and lock.

(v) Cutting and deboning room: Once the carcass is firmly set in
chilling room, deboning (separation of meat from bone) becomes
easier and cut into pieces. The operation is performed in controlled
temperature (10-12°C) area by skilled and efficient worker. An
adequate number of knife sanitizers should be provided at strategic
locations and the area should have illumination of 220 lux.
(vi) Packaging and despatch section: Adjacent to cutting and
deboning room there is packaging room where the meat chunks are
packaged and after freezing they are kept under frozen condition (-
40°C) before despatch. The despatch area should be adequate in space
and shall allow for the orderly and efficient loading of meat into
transport vehicle. At the time of loading, docking system is practiced
whereby there is no air movement into the despatch area or vehicle.

(vii) Condemned meat room: It is directly connected with inspection


area. An adequate space, refrigeration and drainage along with supply
of durable and lockable container and weighing facilities are essential
in order to arrange for sorting and holding of materials unfit for
human consumption prior to despatch. This room should be provided
with only one door located outside the building and should be
provided with lock. At the planning stage of plant due attention
should be given to condemned meat room.

(viii)Detained meat room: Suitable and sufficient facilities should be


provided for the isolation of the meat requiring further examinaton as
sometime the inspector/veterinarian may be neither in a position to
discard the carcass nor to pass it to chilling section. In such cases a
detailed report from quality control laboratory and viscera
examination section is needed. Detained meat room should be located
adjacent to the main slaughter hall inspection point and also to be
connected with condemned meat room as well as chilling section and
after clearance of pending decision, carcass is accordingly sent. If
carcass has to detain for longer time there must be facility for chilling.
Enclosure and lock should be provided

(xi) Quality control laboratory: This is meant for detailed


examination of specimen from carcass and their respective viscera.
Microbiological test, trichinoscopic test etc are conducted here. This
area should be well equipped for detail examination of the carcass and
the organs because the final decision of acceptance or rejection of the
meat and the offals depends on the report of quality control
laboratory. This area should be directly connected with the slaughter
hall.

Accessories Sections of An Abattoir 

Besides these main components of an abattoir, plant should have


following accessories sections:

Blood collection: It is underground to bleeding area and may be


divided into two-edible blood collection section and inedible one.
Blood has got nutritional as well as commercial importance and it
cannot be allowed in waste as in traditional slaughter system.
Hide and skin store: Along with other by products, hide and skin
need to be stored before despatch Their safe storage and primary
processing needs a separate section.

Gut and tripe room: A separate room and hanging space should be
provided for emptying and cleaning of stomach and intestine and this
room should have a separate exit. In this area, there may also be a
provision for the preparation of casing, tripe and edible fat.

Red offal room: Many of visceral organs have commercial as well as


food value. Among these liver, lungs, heart, kidney etc. are the organs
which should be trimmed and then placed in a chill or freezing room
depending on ultimate system of disposal. The temperature of offal
room particularly those to be used as food should not exceed 3°C.
This room should be divided into edible and inedible sections for
further processing. These sections should be preferably separated
from the slaughter floor except for one or two connecting doorways
with self closing doors.

Rendering plant: This section deals with extraction of fat from


carcass parts, condemned carcass/diseased one by applying high
temperature processing. The materials left after fat extraction may be
used for animal feed-fertilizer. The whole section of rendering plant
my be divided into edible fat section and inedible fat section.

Inedible area: All materials unfit for human consumption with


exception of hides and skins should be kept in the section away from
edible areas called inedible area.

Equipment wash: An equipment wash section must be designed to


avoid buggies, bins and washing of equipment at improper places.
The one-way system of passing in equipment, wash section ensures
the entry of dirty equipment's entry from one side and exit of only
clean equipment's from other side.

Manure bay: A large amount of dung from lairage, emptying of


rumen and intestine need a separate section to deal with this huge
mass to avoid problem of flies etc. Floors and walls of this area
should be impervious, easily washable, properly drained and can be
easily disinfected. The floor should be at lower level than other floors
in the slaughter-house.

Veterinary office and laboratory: This section should have essential


facilities and equipment's to carry out inspection work.

Vehicle washing: There should be separate sections for cleaning of


meat transport and animal transport vehicles.

Facilities for personnel: The abattoir building should have well


located toilet rooms Sufficiently away from slaughter walls, separate
hall with lockers and shower facilities, changing room, adequate
facilities for drinking water, washing, canteen and first aid at
convenient location, parking areas and security arrangements etc. as
per number of staffs. We will read these facilities in detail in the next
unit.

Effluent treatment plant: This is the section, which deals with


treatment of waste before their safe disposal in environment. We will
read this effluent treatment else where in this chapter.
Layout of Modem Abattoir Meat Plan

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