L-shape layout
L-shape layout
A . 1 and 2 only
B . 3 and 4 only
C . 1 and 3 only
D . 2 and 3 only
Answer: A
Explanation:
In a traditional warehouse, storage racks are arranged to create parallel picking aisles, perhaps with one or more cross aisles to allow workers to move quickly between picking aisles. This structure forces workers to travel rectilinear distances (north-south and east-west) to picking locations.
Kevin R. Gue and Russell
D. Meller proposed alternative aisle designs:
– The ‘Fan’ shaped layout (or “Flying V”). This layout maintains parallel picking aisles, but al-lows the
cross aisle to take on a different shape. If travel begins and ends at the bottom of the V, Gue and Meller expected distance to retrieve a single pallet is 10% less in this warehouse than in an equivalent traditional design.
– The Herringbone-shaped layout (or commonly referred as Fishbone layout) combines the verti-cal picking rows of a traditional warehouse with a second set of horizontal picking rows, divided by a V-shaped diagonal alley crossing the entire warehouse. This simple modification to the typical warehouse design allows employees (e.g. a forklift driver) to increase travel speed between picking locations. Efficiency gains achieved through a layout reconfiguration would reduce picking cost up to 23% compared to an equivalent warehouse using a traditional configuration.
Reference
Aisle Design – Kevin Gue
LO 1, AC 1.1
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