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Material Handling Student Design Competition 20012002

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Student teams will design a distribution center using good material ... On peak days, pallets from both docks clog up the aisles in the storage/picking area. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Material Handling Student Design Competition 20012002


1
Material Handling Student Design Competition
2001-2002
  • Contest Rules Case Content
  • Sponsored by
  • College Industry Council on Material Handling
    Education (CICMHE)
  • Design Plans IdeasGross Associates

2
Project Summary
  • Student teams will design a distribution center
    using good material handling practices. The
    project will require analysis and design of
    material flow, selection of appropriate material
    handling equipment, and a detailed description of
    the operation. The final designs will be judged
    in a competition.
  • Detailed case study files available at
  • www.mhia.org/cicmhe

3
Contest Information Rules
  • Teams are limited to a total of four members.  No
    more than 2 of the 4 may be graduate students.
  • Only students currently enrolled in college
    courses are eligible to participate.
  • Only one (1) entry per college/university will be
    accepted.
  • Reports are limited to thirty (30) total pages,
    including appendices.
  • Projects should be completed over a 5-week period
    in either the Fall 2001 or Spring 2002 semesters.
  • Teams must complete all of the work themselves.
    They may receive only limited guidance and
    direction from faculty advisors or industry
    professionals.
  • Students may use technical equipment catalogs or
    internet sites as resources in choosing equipment
    for their design.
  • A faculty advisor is expected to distribute and
    explain the contest rules to their student teams,
    collect the submissions, choose the best entry
    from their school and submit it by the contest
    timeline.
  • Reports will be judged by representatives from
    DPI, Gross, and CICMHE.

4
Team Deliverables
  • Five copies of the report (30 pages max) which
    must include
  • A written description of the operation and the
    decisions that were made during design.
  • A list of the equipment used in the operation.
  • A 3.5diskette (labeled with team members names
    and school) that includes
  • A layout of the final design submitted as an
    AutoCAD (.dwg) or Adobe (.pdf) file.
  • A digital photo of the student team. (.jpg file)

5
Final Reports must be postmarked by June 1,
2001and sent to
  • Dr. John S. Usher
  • Department of Industrial Engineering
  • University of Louisville
  • Louisville, KY 40292
  • (502) 852-0085
  • usher_at_louisville.edu
  • The developers of this case will not answer
    questions regarding case content nor will they
    provide any additional information to student
    teams. Teams are expected to make and justify
    their own assumptions in areas where the
    information provided is unclear or insufficient.

6
Timeline
  • September 2001
  • Case study files are available for download by
    participating colleges and universities.
  • May 31, 2002
  • Deadline for receiving entries.
  • July 1, 2002
  • Entries are reviewed and a winners list is
    generated.
  • November 2002
  • Winning entries appear in DPI issue.

7
Prizes
  • 1st Place - 1500
  • 2nd Place - 1000
  • 3rd Place - 500
  • In addition, the academic departments of the top
    three finishers will each receive a 500
    contribution for their participation.

8
Sneaky SneakersExisting Conditions
9
Company Profile
  • Sneaky Sneakers (SS) is a retailer that sells
    athletic shoes in it own stores. It currently
    operates 500 stores that are located primarily in
    shopping malls. They have recently opened their
    website and are now selling shoes directly to
    consumers. They have outgrown their current
    facilities, and they need to design a new
    distribution center that will be able to handle
    their retail and internet business in the same
    facility.

10
Facility Description
  • Sneaky Sneakers has found a property for their
    new distribution center. This 200,000 square
    foot existing facility features 32-0 available
    clear stacking height to the top of the top load
    (including clearances required for overhead
    sprinklers). SS would have to sign a 5 year
    lease on the facility. The facility lease cost
    is 4/square foot/year. The landlord will allow
    SS to lease the space they will require for their
    operation. Any unused space by SS may be leased
    to another party and will not be available to SS
    after that.

11
Empty Facility Space(file available on web site)
Typical Bay is 55-0 x 44-6
12
Operational Details
  • Sneaky Sneakers has a warehouse where they house
    their current operations. This warehouse is
    approximately 75,000 square feet. Cases are
    received floor-stacked in containers from
    overseas. Pallets are built manually on the
    receiving dock and then moved to storage. All
    product is stored in pallet lanes. Not all
    pallets are stored in this facility. SS uses
    another remote warehouse to store overflow
    pallets. Pallets from the overflow warehouse
    arrive already palletized. Cases are picked from
    pallets on the floor to complete orders. Manual
    pallet jacks are used to travel the warehouse and
    build orders. Completed pallets are moved to the
    shipping dock where they are stretch-wrapped and
    paperwork is generated. Pallets are then shipped
    via LTL carriers to the retail stores.

13
Future Conditions
14
Future Conditions
  • The current operation supports 500 retail
    stores. A store normally receives a
    replenishment order every 2 weeks. A normal
    replenishment order is 5 pallets and consists of
    mixed SKUs on all pallets. SS plans on adding an
    additional 75 stores per year for the next few
    years. SSs new internet-catalog business is
    just taking off as well. They currently offer
    100 SKUs to their online customers. The are
    fulfilling 250 orders/day out of their online
    business. They hope to grow this area of their
    business at 20 per year and expand their online
    catalog to include all of their SKUs
    (approximately 2000).

15
Returns
  • SS Management anticipates Returns becoming a
    significant operation with the expansion of their
    internet-catalog business. It is anticipated
    that anywhere from 3 to 15 of all orders will
    be returned. SS needs to have a work area
    designed that will allow for the quick and
    efficient processing of a returned merchandise,
    and with flexibility to handle the high or the
    low end of the returns rate.

16
Product Information
  • Cartons range in size from 16x12x8 (48
    cartons/pallet) to 28x18x12 (16 cartons per
    pallet)
  • Pallets hold approximately 50 cubic feet of
    product
  • Current operations have been found to have
    insufficient receiving and shipping staging. On
    peak days, pallets from both docks clog up the
    aisles in the storage/picking area.
  • Damage of cartons is currently a major problem.
  • All product is received in cartons. The retail
    replenishment business does not require the
    breaking of the full cases. The new internet
    business has required that pickers open a case up
    to remove one pair of shoes to fill an order.

17
Operational Details
  • A one shift operation is now in place. SS hope
    to maintain this in the future.
  • Receiving occurs between 800am and 1130 am.
  • Large inventory items are stored in bulk floor
    lanes (average 2.5 pallets high).
  • Most SKUs have picking locations on the floor
    that can be accessed by pickers. Some SKUs
    require pallet juggling to complete orders.
  • Carriers arrive between 2pm and 430pm daily. On
    an average day, approximately 1/2 of the staged
    product is shipped. The average stay for a case
    on the shipping dock is 1.8 days.

18
Operational Data
19
Operational Data
  • There has been some limited analysis of the
    current state of Sneaky Sneakers operation. The
    following data reports have been made available
    for your use
  • Receiving Log - Last 3 weeks
  • Inventory Profile - Peak inventory level
  • Shipping Profile - Peak shipping month
  • Order Characteristics Lines/Order
    Cartons/Order

20
Receiving Log
21
Inventory Data
22
Shipping Data
Volume Analysis
Peak Month Volume in Pallets
23
Order Characteristics
Typical Daily Order Profile
24
Order Characteristics
Retail
Internet/
Order Statistics
Combined
Stores
Catalog
Average Lines/ Order
21.7


1.4


4.8


Average Cartons/Order
125.8


1.5


22.2


Average Cartons/Line
5.8


1.1


4.7


Typical Daily Order Statistics
25
Equipment
  • Students may use any material handling/storage
    equipment including but not limited to
  • Pallet Rack - Single or Double Deep
  • Pushback Rack, Drive-in Rack
  • Lift Truck - Counterbalanced,Reach, Turret, Jacks
  • Case Flow Rack, Shelving, Carousels
  • Pallet Flow Systems
  • Dock levelers, Dock equipment
  • Conveyor - Powered and Gravity
  • Computers - WMS, scanners, RF technology
  • Mezzanines

26
Finalist Selection
  • Projects will be evaluated using the following
    criteria
  • Product Flow A winning design will propose a
    layout that allows for the most effective
    operation, while minimizing the travel distances
    of product and people.
  • Equipment Utilization A winning design will
    describe and cost justify the choices and
    rationale used in the selection of types and
    quantities of equipment.
  • Space Utilization The winning design will
    illustrate the best use of cubic capacity of the
    building without sacrificing the operational
    effectiveness.
  • Operational Plan The winning design will have
    an accompanying operational plan that clearly
    describes overall system features and operational
    details. This includes the job requirements, use
    of all equipment, integration of any computer/WMS
    technology, and guidelines for running this
    operation efficiently and safely for employees.
  • Overall Integration - The winning design will
    clearly illustrate overall integration of the
    previous four categories.
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