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6.4.4: Cellular Layout

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    117791
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    Cellular layouts are considered a “hybrid” type of layout because it includes characteristics of both a Process layout and a product (line) layout. It is very common that a business may have multiple product lines, with far too much variety in order to take advantage of one assembly line. Often these businesses may have been using a process layout, with all of the associated product movement and waiting times. An alternative that became popular beginning in the late 1980s is the Cellular layout type. This type of production layout is still heavily utilized today.

    This type of layout begins with the company performing a thorough analysis of their products and deciding which products are similar to one another and often share common geometry and processing requirements in terms of equipment, machinery, technology and employee skills. These products are grouped together and manufactured in a work cell. This is referred to as group technology.

    Each work cell will contain a unique set of equipment to manufacture this family of parts in an assembly line type of layout. The equipment is laid out in a U shape with equipment located close together so jobs do not have to move very far.

    Advantages of a cellular layout include:

    1. Reduced set up times for each piece of equipment because each machine is making products that are very similar, often set-ups are very fast or non-existent.
    2. Speed is greatly enhanced because batches can now be small and goods that enter the system will continue until they are complete. Small batches means fast run times and short wait times.
    3. Inventory investment is now reduced due to small batch sizes enabled because of the low set up times required.
    4. Quality is enhanced because employees work only within that cell on a narrow range of products. Cross training of employees ensures good and thorough knowledge of the entire production process.
    5. Employee morale is improved due to working as part of a team that has responsibility for the throughput and quality of the cell. The U-shaped design heightens collaboration among workers.
    6. Less floor space is required due to machines being placed close together and less movement of product.

    An example of a U-shaped layout can be found below:

    A layout with numbered circles 1-7 around two employees in a U shape.

    Here is a video on cellular manufacturing:


    6.4.4: Cellular Layout is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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