The design should accommodate reversible connections, ie things that can be undone and dismantled.
a portfolio of new pharmaceutical products.I started with the basis that each new product would follow one of four trajectories of sales.
The first would be that it hit a base demand., the second 1.5 x base demand, the third 0.5 x base demand and the fourth did not get launched or sold at all or 0.The demand curves were normalised curves.. To simply represent a portfolio of products I allocated a probability to each of the four trajectories.. Then I looked at scale.
I used a few API (chemical synthesis) projects to normalise a base scale.I then looked at relative scales around this.
The smallest being.
, the largest being.Using the same concept to enable advanced and automated design will only multiply those benefits.. To learn more about our Design to Value approach, sign up for our monthly newsletter here:.
http://bit.ly/BWNewsUpdatesDesign for Manufacture and Assembly (DfMA).is a whole-project approach, starting with design and working through to assembly.
Designing with the detail of assembly in mind, and making sure that M&E engineers work closely with architects and structural engineers, we deliver built assets with performance as part of their DNA.And nowhere is this more relevant than in data centre design.. A data centre is about performance above all – minimising cost per kW, maximising IT yield per square metre, minimising energy and water consumption, maximising the efficiency of M&E building services, and minimising waste..