Factory Layout Planner
Example Data Table
Use these sample values to validate your setup and exports.
| Scenario | Facility (m) | Workstations | Machines | Support % | Circulation | Expected outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter line | 60 × 30 | 4 groups, 1 each | M2: 2 units, M3: 3 units | 38% | 1.18 | Fits with moderate aisle reserve |
| High WIP | 60 × 30 | 6 groups, 1 each | M2: 3 units, M3: 6 units | 50% | 1.22 | Likely tight; revise storage strategy |
| Lean flow | 50 × 25 | 5 groups, 1 each | M2: 2 units, M3: 4 units | 32% | 1.12 | Higher efficiency; verify safety clearances |
Formula Used
- Available area: A = L × W
- Effective usable area: A_eff = A × ShapeFactor
- Equipment footprint: A_eq = Σ(Length × Width × Quantity)
- Clearance area per unit (buffer approximation): A_clr ≈ 2c(L+W) + 4c²
- Productive area: A_prod = A_eq + Σ(A_clr)
- Operator allowance: A_op = A_prod × (Op% / 100)
- Dock staging: A_dock = Docks × DockDepth × DockWidth
- Support areas: A_sup = (A_prod + A_op + A_dock) × (Support% / 100)
- Circulation/aisles: A_circ = (A_base × CircFactor) − A_base, where A_base = A_prod + A_op + A_dock + A_sup
- Contingency: A_cont = (A_base + A_circ) × (Cont% / 100)
- Total required: A_req = A_base + A_circ + A_cont
- Layout efficiency: Eff% = (A_prod / A_eff) × 100
- Flow cost (comparison metric): Cost_day = Distance × Moves × CostPerMeter
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your facility length, width, and a realistic shape efficiency factor.
- Set aisle width and safety clearance to match your operating rules.
- Add workstations and machine footprints with quantities.
- Adjust storage and support percentages to reflect your process.
- Choose a circulation factor; higher values mean more aisles and crossings.
- Submit to see whether the plan fits and how much buffer remains.
- Use CSV or PDF export to compare different layout versions.
FAQs
1) What does the shape efficiency factor represent?
It discounts unusable space from columns, cutouts, walls, and fixed obstacles. If your building is simple and open, use 0.95–0.98. For complex footprints, reduce it.
2) Why is clearance added per machine instead of a fixed percent?
Clearance depends on equipment size and perimeter. Adding it per unit scales better when you change machine mix, and helps avoid underestimating safety and maintenance access.
3) How should I choose the circulation factor?
Use 1.10–1.25 for typical production spaces. Increase it for frequent crossings, forklifts, or complex routing. Decrease it only if flow is very linear and controlled.
4) Does this create an actual drawing of my factory layout?
It calculates space feasibility and planning ratios. Use the results to guide a detailed block layout or CAD drawing, where turning radii, exits, and code requirements are validated.
5) What if my result does not fit?
Reduce quantities, tighten storage percentages, improve flow to reduce circulation needs, or increase effective area by removing obstacles. The area gap value shows how much change is needed.
6) How accurate is the estimated aisle count?
It is a quick sanity check based on width and aisle pitch. Real aisle counts depend on fire egress routes, equipment placement, vehicle paths, and segregated pedestrian lanes.
7) Can I use this for warehouses or mixed facilities?
Yes. Treat rack zones as “equipment footprints,” set storage percentages appropriately, and use a higher circulation factor if lift traffic is heavy. Then validate with racking safety guidance.