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ACTIVE Principles of Lean Thinking

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Minimised shutdown period. Front end design and long lead time equipment costs pre-sanctioned ... Minimised risk, maximised opportunities. Constructability ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ACTIVE Principles of Lean Thinking


1
  • ACTIVE Principles of Lean Thinking How they are
    applied in practice
  • 1st July 2004

2
Overview of PROjEN
  • Management owned, Founded in 1978
  • 60 multi-disciplined project professionals
    (approx 70 staff)
  • Key services include feasibility studies, capital
    justifications, front-end engineering, turnkey
    responsibility
  • Additional services include capital planning
    support, training and legislation compliance
    support in ATEX, IPPC, CDM etc
  • Key markets served are the Food and
    Pharmaceutical sectors, plus Waste, Chemical and
    General Manufacturing industries
  • ISO 90012000, RoSPA Gold in 2002 2003 2004
  • Voted European Construction Institutes ACTIVE
    Contractor of the Year for 2003, Project of
    the Year 2004

3
Recent Projectsand Clients
  • 5 million R22 Refrigeration Replacement
  • 250k New Sampling Facility
  • 850k Automation of existing plant
  • 90k Steam Main Upgrade
  • 400k Packing Line Relocation
  • 1.4 million Site Relocation
  • 10k Capex Planning Consultancy
  • 80k Custard Gravy Line Relocation
  • 4.4 million Glass Condenser Replacement
  • 25k Demolition Studies
  • Onsite Alliance working at Kodak, AZ, Aventis,
    BNFL, Vauxhall

4
What is ACTIVE?
  • Achieving
  • Competitiveness
  • Through
  • Innovation
  • Value
  • Enhancement

5
ACTIVE 1996 Action Plan
  • Inefficient business processes which have
    produced a culture of confrontation rather than
    co-operation must be eliminated
  • Cultural change will be necessary at all levels,
    both throughout the entire supply chain and
    vertically throughout each of the organisations
    involved in the industry
  • Within the project environment the greatest
    opportunities for effecting value improvements
    are to be found in the earliest stages of
    projects

6

ACTIVE Principles of Effectiveness
ACTIVE seeks to achieve a competitive world class
process engineering and construction industry
with satisfied clients, thriving contractors and
suppliers by transforming the way in which they
deliver projects worldwide. This will be
achieved through more effective
  • Project Risk Management
  • Using a structured process for managing risk and
    assigning responsibility to those in the supply
    chain best able to manage it
  • Innovation Continuous Improvement
  • Encouraging a challenge culture with processes
    for capturing learning and regarding innovative
    ideas throughout he supply chain
  • Project Execution
  • Managing the implementation process to integrate
    activities efficiently to successfully achieve
    project objectives
  • Performance Measurement
  • Defining key performance indicators which
    demonstrate the achievement of project goals and
    benchmarking performance to drive improvement
  • Project Concept Definition
  • Setting clear aligned objectives and scope with
    defined, well understood implementation
    strategies
  • Project Team Management
  • Establishing an maintaining a single integrated
    team with clearly defined roles and
    responsibilities and shared common objectives
  • Supply Chain Relationships
  • Ensuring that supply chain relationships work to
    maximise value and equitably share both risks and
    benefits
  • Information Management Communications
  • Timely management of relevant information using
    appropriate technology and clear documentation to
    aid communication throughout the team

7
Common issues encountered in Construction
Projects Production
  • A complex supply chain precedes construction just
    as it precedes production
  • Constructability processes ensure that the
    construction process is designed at the same time
    as the asset, which is fundamental to production,
    but is rarely used to its full extent
  • Shortages of information, materials, equipment
    and resources reduce the efficiency of a
    construction project just as in production
  • When delays occur resources are diverted to lower
    priority work or short term fixes reducing
    efficiency producing rework
  • Project plans build in float which gets used as
    they do with pre-lean production plans
  • Site area is wasted with excessive material
    storage just as production can hold excessive
    buffer stocks and WIP
  • Each of the parties seek to optimise their part
    which results in sub-optimisation of the project
    as a whole because the interdependancies are not
    fully understood

8
Lean Project Delivery employing ACTIVE Principles
  • Effective project selection and prioritisation to
    ensure strategic alignment
  • Use of flexible stage and gate project framework
    with gates used as entry not exit points
  • Work package overlap to shorten schedule
  • Early decision making
  • Integrated work teams with shared objectives
  • Projects well defined and value streams
    identified
  • Effective and flexible project teams
  • Individuals with high level of competence and
    can-do attitude
  • Excellence built into core project management
    techniques and controls

9
Lean Project Delivery employing ACTIVE Principles
(Contd)
  • Higher than normal peak demands as a result of
    parallel approach
  • Requirement for highly effective risk management
    techniques
  • Strong ownership Project Sponsor
  • Stakeholder involvement
  • Value analysis to shorten schedules
  • Constructability/Buildability 3D Modelling
  • Elimination of waste
  • Effective supplier selection
  • Early commencement of operator training
  • Projects closed formally
  • Post-Implementation reviews

10
CASE STUDY
  • ECI ACTIVE Project of the Year 2004
  • for GlaxoSmithKline
  • Stevenage RD Site

11
Background
  • Modifications to refrigeration and Heat Transfer
    Fluid (HTF) distribution systems
  • Existing compressors handling R22 refrigerant
    being replaced with ammonia refrigeration
    packages
  • Environmental compliance
  • Increased capacity
  • New building
  • New HTF pumps and associated controls integrated
    with existing plant
  • Critical project timescales installation and
    commissioning must be completed during 30 day
    shutdown period

12
Lean Principles Employed
  • Stage Gate process with parallel working
  • Strong project sponsorship and business benefits
    focus
  • Collaborative approach employing common systems
    and procedures with common objectives
  • Empowered integrated Project Team on Site
  • Identification of concurrent engineering
    opportunities
  • Minimised shutdown period
  • Front end design and long lead time equipment
    costs pre-sanctioned
  • Suppliers and Construction Management involved in
    front end development phase
  • Shortened design phase
  • Minimised risk, maximised opportunities
  • Constructability/Buildability focus

13
Lean Principles Employed (Contd)
  • Commissioning considered at design phase
  • High emphasis on risk management throughout
  • Value engineering on building
  • Cost savings
  • Shortened schedule
  • Suppliers selected with existing partnership
    agreements
  • Location and layout of construction site
    carefully considered
  • Increased efficiency
  • Minimise on-site inventory
  • 3D modelling employed

14
GlaxoSmithKline Medicines Research Centre Gunnels
Wood Road Stevenage Hertfordshire
PROJEN PLC Winnington Avenue, Northwich, Chesire,
CW8 4EE Telephone 01606 871111 Facximile
01606 871133 E- mail mailbox_at_projen.co.uk
WEST - PRIMARY SYSTEM, TEMPORARY FEED RETURN
PIPING Doc. No SKETCH 42 19.03.04
15
ECI ACTIVE Project of the Year, 2004
  • Judges comments
  • An excellent example of contractor and client
    working together using ACTIVE Principles
  • An excellent front end project with the
    contractor, PROjEN, using PDRI and an integrated
    team approach
  • Two notable achievements were the vendor
    selection process and the project risk assessment
    process

16
Conclusions
  • There are sufficient similarities between
    production and construction projects to adopt
    Lean Thinking concepts to project management
  • ECI ACTIVE Principles and Lean Thinking overlap
    and compliment each other in a number of areas
  • PROjEN and their clients have gained significant
    advantage from employing ACTIVE Principles in a
    spirit of collaboration to reduce both project
    timescales and costs

17
  • ACTIVE Principles of Lean Thinking How they are
    applied in practice
  • 1st July 2004
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