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Optimizing fishbone aisles for dual‐command operations in a warehouse

Letitia M. PohlDepartment of Industrial Engineering, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701Russell D. MellerDepartment of Industrial Engineering, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701Kevin R. GueDepartment of Industrial & Systems Engineering, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama 36849
2009en
ABI

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Abstract Unit‐load warehouses store and retrieve unit‐loads, typically pallets. When storage and retrieval operations are not coordinated, travel is from a pickup and deposit (P&D) point to a pallet location and back again. In some facilities, workers interleave storage and retrieval operations to form a dual‐command cycle. Two new aisle designs proposed by Gue and Meller (“Improving the unit‐load warehouse.” In Progress in Material Handling Research: 2006. Material Handling Industry of America, Charlotte, NC, 2006) use diagonal aisles to reduce the travel distance to a single pallet location by approximately 10 and 20[percnt] for the two designs, respectively. We develop analytical expressions for travel between pallet locations for one of these—the fishbone design. We then compare fishbone warehouses that have been optimized for dual‐command to traditional warehouses that have been optimized in the same manner, and show that an optimal fishbone design reduces dual‐command travel by 10–15%. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Naval Research Logistics 54: 389–403, 2009

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