Managing the “Receding Edge”

Camille Salem, Cecile Lefèvre, Jun Li, R. Waters, I. Tommelein, Eshan Jayamanne, P. Shuler
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

So much attention is paid to starting construction activities, and starting new work at regular time intervals to a beat (aka. takt) that—not surprisingly—work to finish those very activities may fall behind. This paper focuses, not on the start-, the “leading edge, ”but on the end of activities, the “receding edge.” The receding edge articulates when work is “done-done” and the successor contractor may start their work, unimpeded by their predecessors’ unfinished work or “leftovers” (e.g., areas left dirty and cluttered with remnants). This paper describes receding-edge activities related to forming, placing, and finishing post-tensioned, cast-in-place concrete slabs, observed on a project in San Francisco, California. The researchers went to the gemba, described the current situation, and exchanged ideas with the contractor on means to keep the receding edge progressing at the pace of the leading edge, that is: to improve the cycle time from start, to not just finished or “done,” but to “done-done” completion of each slab. Findings include the need to define standard processes (e.g., for clean-up work) as those observed appeared defective (one of Ohno’s 7 wastes) or none existed, and to designate resources to accomplish them. This paper contributes to knowledge by articulating the receding edge concept, describing challenges in managing it, and documenting lean methods as countermeasures to those challenges. When managed considering the production impact of receding-edge work on the contractor responsible for it and on follow-on contractors, the case for cycle time reduction is easy to make and worth the money. 1 MS Student, Engineering and Project Management, University of California, Berkeley, camillesalem@berkeley.edu, orcid.org/0000-0003-2755-3951 2 MS Student, Engineering and Project Management, University of California, Berkeley, cecile_lefevre@berkeley.edu,orcid.org/0000-0002-3588-5553 3 MS Student, Energy, Civil Infrastructure, and Climate, University of California, Berkeley, gjli@berkeley.edu, orcid.org/0000-0002-8246-3193 4 MS Student, Engineering and Project Management, University of California, Berkeley, ruth11waters13@berkeley.edu, orcid.org/0000-0003-2755-3951 5 Professor, Civil and Envir. Engrg. Dept., Director, Project Production Systems Lab., University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-1712, tommelein@berkeley.edu, orcid.org/0000-0002-9941-6596 6 Project Engineer, Webcor Builders, San Francisco, CA, ejayamanne@webcor.com, orcid.org/00000003-4990-9170 7 Performance Excellence Manager, Webcor Builders, San Francisco, CA, pshuler@webcor.com, orcid.org/0000-0003-0109-2309 Camille Salem, Cecile Lefèvre, Jun Li, Ruth Waters, Iris D. Tommelein, Eshan Jayamanne, and Patrick Shuler 714 Proceedings IGLC-26, July 2018 | Chennai, India
管理“退步优势”
如此多的注意力放在开始施工活动上,并按节拍(即节拍)定期开始新工作。因此,完成这些活动的工作可能会落后,这并不奇怪。本文关注的不是活动的开始,即“前沿”,而是活动的结束,即“后退边缘”。当工作“完成-完成”时,后继承包商可以开始他们的工作,不受其前任未完成的工作或“残余物”(例如,留下的肮脏和残余物混乱的区域)的阻碍。本文描述了在加利福尼亚州旧金山的一个项目中观察到的与成型、放置和完成后张、现浇混凝土板相关的前沿活动。研究人员去了gemba,描述了目前的情况,并与承包商就如何保持后退边的进度与前沿边的速度交换了意见,即:改善从开始到完成的周期时间,而不是仅仅完成或“完成”,而是“完成”完成每个板。调查结果包括需要定义标准过程(例如,清理工作),因为那些观察到的是有缺陷的(大野的7种废物之一)或不存在,并指定资源来完成它们。本文通过阐明后退边缘概念,描述管理它的挑战,并将精益方法作为应对这些挑战的对策,为知识做出贡献。当考虑到前沿工程对承包商和后续承包商的生产影响时,缩短周期时间很容易实现,而且物有所值。1硕士学生,工程与项目管理,加州大学伯克利分校,camillesalem@berkeley.edu, orcid.org/0000-0003-2755-3951 2硕士学生,工程与项目管理,加州大学伯克利分校,cecile_lefevre@berkeley.edu,orcid.org/0000-0002-3588-5553 3硕士学生,能源,土木基础设施和气候,加州大学伯克利分校,gjli@berkeley.edu, orcid.org/0000-0002-8246-3193 4硕士学生,工程与项目管理,camillesalem@berkeley.edu加州大学伯克利分校,ruth11waters13@berkeley.edu, orcid.org/0000-0003-2755-3951 5教授,土木与环境。Engrg。部门主任,项目生产系统实验室。6项目工程师,Webcor Builders,旧金山,CA, ejayamanne@webcor.com, orcid.org/00000003-4990-9170 7绩效卓越经理,Webcor Builders,旧金山,CA, pshuler@webcor.com, orcid.org/0000-0003-0109-2309 Camille Salem, Cecile lefvre, Jun Li, Ruth Waters, Iris D. Tommelein, Eshan Jayamanne和Patrick Shuler 714 Proceedings iglr -26, July 2018 |金奈,印度
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