Plant Location & Layout: Factors & Types
What is Plant Location?
Plant Location refers to the strategic decision of choosing the best geographical site for setting up a business or factory. It is a long-term decision that cannot be easily changed.
The Goal (Ideal Location): An ideal location is one where the cost of the product is kept to a minimum, with a large market share, the least risk, and the maximum social gain. It is the place of maximum net advantage.
Factors Affecting Plant Location (Locational Analysis)
When choosing a site, entrepreneurs must analyze various factors:
1. Primary Factors:
Availability of Raw Materials: Being close to raw materials reduces transport costs (crucial for sugar or cement industries).
Access to Market: Being close to customers ensures quick delivery and lower distribution costs.
Labor Availability: Access to skilled and unskilled workers at reasonable wages.
Transport Facilities: Connectivity via road, rail, air, or sea.
Power and Fuel: Reliable supply of electricity and water.
2. Secondary Factors:
Climatic Conditions: (e.g., Textile industries prefer humid climates).
Government Policies: Tax holidays, subsidies, or zoning laws.
Infrastructure: Banking, communication, and drainage facilities.
What is Plant Layout?
Plant Layout involves the physical arrangement of machines, equipment, workstations, and service facilities within the factory.
Objectives:
Minimize material handling costs.
Utilize space effectively.
Ensure employee safety.
Facilitate a smooth flow of work (from raw material to finished product).
Types of Plant Layout
There are four main types of layouts used in manufacturing:
1. Product Layout (Line Layout)
Concept: Machines are arranged in a straight line according to the sequence of operations. The product moves from one station to the next until completion.
Suitability: Mass production of standardized goods (e.g., Cars, Mobile Phones, Cement).
Pros: Fast production, low material handling cost.
Cons: If one machine breaks, the whole line stops. Less flexible.
2. Process Layout (Functional Layout)
Concept: Machines of a similar type are grouped together in separate departments (e.g., All Drilling machines in one room, all Welding machines in another). The product travels to different departments based on its needs.
Suitability: Job order production, custom-made products (e.g., Furniture, Auto Repair Shop).
Pros: High flexibility, easy to handle breakdowns.
Cons: High material handling cost (backtracking), longer production time.
3. Fixed Position Layout (Static Layout)
Concept: The product remains stationary (fixed) because it is too heavy or bulky to move. Men, machines, and materials are brought to the product.
Suitability: Making huge things (e.g., Ships, Aircraft, Buildings, Dams).
Pros: Minimal movement of the major product.
Cons: Requires huge space and complex scheduling of workers.
4. Combined (Hybrid) Layout
Concept: A mix of the above types. For example, a factory might use a Process Layout to manufacture individual parts and a Product Layout to assemble them into the final unit. This is common in modern industries.
Assembly Line Balancing
A critical concept in Product Layout is Line Balancing.
Definition: It is the process of assigning tasks to workstations so that the time taken at each station is approximately the same.
Goal: To minimize idle time. If Station A takes 2 minutes and Station B takes 5 minutes, Station B becomes a bottleneck, slowing down the whole line. Balancing ensures smooth flow.
Service Layouts
Layouts are not just for factories.
Retail Layouts: Designed to maximize customer exposure to products (e.g., Supermarkets place essentials at the back so you walk past everything else).
Office Layouts: Designed for efficient information flow and employee comfort.
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