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Topics already covered. The roles of the Warehouse in contemporary distribution networksBufferConsolidationValue Adding ProcessingWarehouse classification based on Customer typesFactory WarehouseRetail Distribution WarehouseCatalog RetailerSupport to Manufacturing operations. Topics already covered (cont.).
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1. The Warehouse Design and Control Problem Based on
Rouwenhorst et. al.,EJOR, Vol. 122, pgs 515-533, 2000
Yoon, C. S. and Sharp, G., IIE Trans., Vol. 28, pgs 379-389, 1996
3. Topics already covered (cont.)
4. Topics already covered (cont.) Major warehouse equipment, its functionality, and justification
Containers & Unitizing Equipment
Storage and Retrieval Equipment
Unit Load
Small Load
Conveyors
Warehouse docks and dock-related equipment
Automatic Identification and Communication Equipment
5. Major decisions underlying the Warehouse deployment and operations Configuration issues
Organization of the material flow
Unit Loads
Establishment of a forward area
items to be included in the forward area
sizing of the forward area
Zoning, Time Windows and Pick Waves
Equipment selection and its sizing
storage modes
order picking and material handling equipment
Warehouse management system and automatic identification and communication equipment
Layout: Allocation of Storage Capacity
Personnel skills and sizing
6. Major decisions underlying the Warehouse deployment and operations Policies
Receiving policies
Assigning trucks to docks
Storage policies
Assigning received material to storage locations
Replenishment policies
Order processing policies
order batching policies
zoning policies
picker routing
Sortation and consolidation policies
Shipping policies
7. Decision / Performance Criteria
8. Warehouse types/missions and Competitive Strategies Factory warehouse: Interfaces production with wholesalers
small number of large orders daily
advance info about order composition
=> focus on cost and order accuracy
(responsiveness depends heavily on production schedules)
Retail Distribution warehouse: Serves a number of captive retail units
advance info about order composition
carton and item picking from a forward area
more orders per shift than consolidation/shipping lanes
=> focus on cost, accuracy and fill rate
(responsiveness depends heavily on truck routing schedules)
Remark: If the retail units are not captive, then responsiveness becomes a crucial issue!
9. Warehouse types/missions and Competitive Strategies Catalog Retailer: A warehouse filling orders from catalog sales
a large number of small (frequently single-line) orders
item and, sometimes, carton picking
daily composition of orders usually unknown
only statistical information available
=> focus on cost and response time
Support of Manufacturing operations: A stock room providing raw material and/or work-in-process to manufacturing operations
many small orders
only statistical information available about order composition
stringent time requirements (e.g., response in 30 min)
=> focus on response time but also accuracy and cost
10. Yoon & Sharps design procedure
11. Defining Department and Subsystem structure
12. Determining the basic system structure
13. Warehouse Activity Profiling(c.f. Bartholdi & Hackman, Chpt. 10)
14. Addressing the problem complexity:Hierarchical Decomposition Strategic-level decisions: they have the longer-lasting impact on the operation of the warehouse, and involve major investment
process flow design
equipment selection
Tactical-level decisions: medium-term decisions which might still involve significant investment
sizing of the facility areas and its equipment
Storage layout
resolution of organizational issues like the storage and replenishment schemes, and batch sizing
Operational-level decisions: Decisions and policies related to the real-time operation of the facility
assignment and control problems of people and equipment
15. Strategic-Level Concerns (Rouwenhorst et.al.)
16. Tactical-level concerns(Rouwenhorst et. al.)
17. Operational-level concerns(Rouwenhorst et. al.)
18. General Remarks The decomposition is ad-hoc: no theoretical justification
Top-down approach: Higher-level decisions constitute constraints for lower-level decision making:
However, they must be revised if the lower-level problems become infeasible
Most existing quantitative analysis addresses tactical and operational issues
Strategic level issues hard to formally model and analyze due to
underlying problem complexity
elusive / intangible nature of some of the considered criteria (e.g., flexibility).
Typically, one seeks to narrow down the design alternatives to a few configurations that tend to minimize (annualized investment and operational) costs, while meeting some technical and performance-related constraints
19. Course roadmap Familiarize ourselves with the formal theory and key analytical results addressing some of the problems identified in the above taxonomy.
Storage configuration and storage policies
the forward/reserve problem
order-picking: batching, zoning, and routing
Warehouse layout
Configuring and controlling automated storage and retrieval equipment
Cross-docking
Address the synthesis/design problem through project assignments
Rouwenhorst et. al.: a good starting point for tracing literature on a particular problem.