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FP Lec 1 (Compatibility Mode)

This document discusses facilities planning and design. It provides an overview of key concepts including the evaluation scheme, introduction to layout planning and facility planning, examples of different facility types, and the facilities planning process. The significance of facilities planning is that the majority of capital is spent on facilities, and effective planning can significantly reduce operating costs through improved material handling and flexibility. The goal is to optimize the arrangement of resources to support the activity's objectives at the lowest possible cost.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
72 views

FP Lec 1 (Compatibility Mode)

This document discusses facilities planning and design. It provides an overview of key concepts including the evaluation scheme, introduction to layout planning and facility planning, examples of different facility types, and the facilities planning process. The significance of facilities planning is that the majority of capital is spent on facilities, and effective planning can significantly reduce operating costs through improved material handling and flexibility. The goal is to optimize the arrangement of resources to support the activity's objectives at the lowest possible cost.

Uploaded by

yehya
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Facilities Planning and Design

INE 425

Lec 1

1
Evaluation Scheme
• midterm tests
• Assignment Problem in Class 30
• Lectures and projects
• Final exam 70
• Total 100 = 100%

2
Introduction
• Layout planning is determining the best
physical arrangement of resources within a
facility.
• It may be defined as a technique of locating
machines, processes and plant services within
the factory so as to achieve the right quantity
and quality of output at the lowest possible
cost of manufacturing.

3
Facility Planning
The physical arrangement of production
machines and equipment, workstations,
people, materials, and material handling
equipment.

4
What are facilities?
• Fixed assets like building structures and
inanimate resources that support the
operations of a given activity.

• Facilities put together with humans, $ and/or


materials, energy result in the activity

5
Examples of Facilities
• Production: any discrete parts or process industry facilities
• Health care: hospitals, clinics, rehab centers, nursing home
• Education: schools, colleges, day care centers, libraries
• Food: restaurants, fast-food places, banquet halls
• Commercial/Residential: shopping malls, office buildings,
banks, houses, hotels, motels
• Government/Public Services: court house, IRS, INS, post
office,
• Military: barracks, control rooms
• Transportation: airports, train stations, bus terminals
• Public assembly: stadium, auditoriums, theaters
• Religious: Mosques, temples, churches

6
A Dentist Office
A Research Office
A Manufacturing Facility
Facilities Planning
• Determines how an activity's tangible fixed assets
best support achieving the activity's objectives.
– Planning determines course of action ahead of time so
subsequent decisions can be made efficiently
– Design more technical details that with a use of model,
describe the implementation of the plan
• Disciplines involved in facilities design
– Engineering: civil, electrical, mechanical, industrial
– Architects, consultants, contractors, managers, real-
estate people, personnel from the activity, etc.
Variety of Facility Planning (FP) Tools
• Facility Planning (FP) tools vary from
checklists, cookbook type approaches to
highly sophisticated mathematical modeling
approaches.
Applications of Facilities Planning (FP)
• a new hospital,
• an assembly department,
• an existing warehouse,
• the baggage department in an airport,
• department building of IE in EMU,
• a production plant,
• a retail store,
• a bank,
• an office,
• a cinema,
• a parking lot,
• or any portion of these activities etc…
Applications of Facilities Planning (FP)
• Facilities Planning (FP) determines how an
activities tangible fixed assets best support
achieving the activity’s objectives.
i.e. what is the objective of the facility? How the
facility achieves that objective?
• In the case of a manufacturing firm:
FP involves the determination of how the
manufacturing facility best supports production.
• In the case of a hospital:
for a hospital determines how the hospital facility
supports providing medical care to patients.
Continuous improvement FP cycle
FP Hierarchy
FP Hierarchy
• Facilities Location
Location of the facility refers to its placement
with respect to customers, suppliers, and other
facilities with which it interfaces.
• Facilities Design
Design components of a facility consists of the
facility systems, the layout and the handling
systems.
FP Hierarchy
• Facilities Systems:
Consists of the structural systems, the atmospheric
systems, the lighting/electricity/communication
systems, the life safety systems and the sanitation
systems.
• Layout:
Consists of all equipment, machinery and furnishings
within the building.
• Handling Systems:
Consists of the mechanism need to satisfy the
required facility interactions.
e.g. for a manufacturing system:
Facilities Planning
• Facility Systems – the structure (of building),
power, light, gas, heat, ventilation, air-
conditioning, water and sewage needs.
• Layout – the production areas, related support
areas, personnel areas.
• Handling Systems – the materials- personnel,
information, and equipment to support
manufacturing.
Facilities Planning
• Facilities Planning for specific types of
facilities:
• a) Manufacturing plant
• b) Office
• c) Hospital
• d) Emergency room
Facilities Planning
Engineering Point of View of Facilities Planning

• Location of the facility: placement of the


facility w.r.t customers/suppliers
• Choice of resources
• Layout of resources/components
• Performance evaluation
• The design process ends when the
implementation phase of the physical design
begins
Five Types of Facility Design Projects
1. New Facility – fewer restrictions and constraints on
the layout since it is new
2. New Product – integration of a new product into the
existing process and layout
3. Design Changes – incorporate the impact of design
changes into the manufacturing process
4. Cost Reduction – redesign the existing layout to
facilitate cost reduction programs and ideas
5. Retrofit – similar to a new facility layout except with
the constraints present
Facilities Layout Goals
• Money
– Minimize unit production cost. Minimize project
cost. Optimize quality.
– Promote the effective use of (a) people, (b) space, (c)
equipment, and (d) energy.
– Reduce and eliminate excessive inventory.
– Achieve the production start date.
– Build flexibility into the plan.
• People
– Provide for (a) employee convenience, (b) employee
safety, and (c) employee comfort.
Significance of Facilities Planning
Significance of Facilities Planning
• Majority of an organization's capital investment is in facilities -
- 8% of GNP ($250 billion) spent annually of facilities.
• Single most important cause of high material handling costs is
lack of strategic facilities planning
• Material handling account for 20 - 50% of operating costs in
manufacturing
• Effective material handling can reduce costs by 10 - 30%
• Long term effect: flexibility, expandability
• Environmental implications: hazardous waste disposal
• Safety, convenience, appearance - influence worker morale
• Lead to economic development
Facilities Planning Process
Facilities Planning Process
MANUFACTURING PRODUCTION
FACILITIES PLANNING is the focus of
this course
Production Systems
CUSTOMERS

INPUTS
Conversion Process
*Workers OUTPUTS
*Managers
*Equipment *Operations *Goods
*Facilities *Transformations
*Materials *Services
*Energy *Activities
*Information *Interrelationships
*Environment

Information feedback on performance


The Enterprise Design Process
OPERATIONS DESIGN
PRODUCT DESIGN PROCESS DESIGN
MARKET RESEARCH
AND SALES
FORECASTING Work Meth. & Stds.
Material & Process Tool & Equipment
Manpower Reqts.
Requirements Specifications
Equipment Reqts.

FACILITIES DESIGN
COST DETERMINATION
PROCURE PROCURE
FACILITIES FUNDS
Facility Requirements
Financial
--Production
Requirements
--Auxiliary
INSTALL --Service
FACILITIES

MANUFACTURING

PRODUCTION
PROCURE MANPOWER
RE- STO-
PKG
CEIVING RAGE FABRICATE PRODUCT
OR PERFORM SERVICE
WARE- SHIP-
PROCURE MATERIALS HOUSE PING
ASSY

Energy
PHYSICAL
CUSTOMER SALES AND
DISTRIBUTION
MARKETING
References
text book:
Tompkins, White, Bozer, and Tanchoco, 1996
"Facilities Planning," 2nd edition, Wiley, New
York (‫)ﻣوﺟود ﺑﻣﻛﺗﺑﺔ اﻟﻛﻠﯾﺔ‬

Required
Reading Chapter 1, and chapter 2 from this
book

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