"Factory Design" covers many areas and types of analysis. It is generally clumped together in the Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering fields of study:
[ul]
[li]manufacturing metrics analysis (cycle times, capacities, etc.)[/li]
[li]determination & specification of production system that will go into the factory: single/multiple stations, cellular, manual/automated, etc., material handling & storage, etc.[/li]
[li]cellular manufacturing & group technology for optimized processes[/li]
[li]physical plant layout for lean manufacturing design, material flow, line balancing, etc.[/li]
[li]worker ergonomics[/li]
[li]production system administration[/li]
[li]and a bunch of other things that must happen for it all to be moderately successful like training, signage, inventory control, etc.[/li]
[/ul]
I've done this for my entire career and now teach a course in it. I've not been able to find a single, good textbook. Some sources for you to investigate:
[ul]
[li]textbooks in Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering by Groover (even the older versions are still relevant and can be obtained inexpensively)[/li]
[li]many textbooks on
factory layout design are on the market[/li]
[li]one of the most comprehensive single books I have found is a hard-core, old-school, badly written, unattractive spiral bound work book from SME called Planning Manufacturing Cells. It was developed by (presumably) successful Industrial Engineering consultants doing this type of work for money. The information & method is good, but students hated it...requires reading & digesting the info[/li]
[li]There are a couple useful chapters in Maynard's Handbook of Industrial Engineering for this type of content[/li]
[/ul]
I'm not advertising because the jury is still out on the utility of this software. But for my next semester I investigating using Autodesk's
Factory Design Utilities suite for my course. It has some interesting features to throw down 2D AutoCAD layouts, easily convert to 3D Inventor models, easily convert to something called Navisworks for collision/interference checking, group review & comment, visualize animated walkthroughs, then use their attempt at Discrete Event Simulation (a package they call Process Analysis) to simulate production and verify throughputs. It sure looks interesting, but it is a poorly-explained solution to a complicated niche-market and their marketing is simply awful IMHO.
TygerDawg
Blue Technik LLC
Virtuoso Robotics Engineering