Packaging Equipment Layout Planning for Factories: Space, Workflow, and Scalability

Packaging Equipment Layout Planning for Factories: Space, Workflow, and Scalability

Most factory managers can tell you exactly how many bags per minute their VFFS machine runs. Ask them how many square meters their packaging line wastes on unnecessary product travel, and you'll get a blank stare.

Layout planning is the least glamorous part of packaging line design — and the most expensive to fix after equipment is bolted to the floor. This guide covers the spatial decisions that matter before a single machine is ordered.

Start With Product Flow, Not Machine Placement

Map the material path before touching a floor plan: raw product entry → weighing/dosing → filling & sealing → inspection → finished bag exit → rejected product collection → operator station. Draw this as a continuous line. Every turn is a potential bottleneck. Every unnecessary meter of conveyor is ongoing maintenance cost.

Four Layout Configurations

I-Shape (Straight Line). All equipment on a single axis, one operator can see the entire line. Needs 12–18m linear space, 3.5–4.5m ceiling height. Best for new builds with rectangular floor plans.

L-Shape. 90° turn at the discharge conveyor, reduces length by ~30%. Best for retrofit installations where infeed direction doesn't align with warehouse exit.

U-Shape. Line doubles back, infeed and outfeed on the same side. Roughly 6×8m footprint. One operator manages both ends. Best for small factories and startup operations.

Parallel Lines. Two or more complete lines sharing a central service aisle. Most space-efficient for multi-line facilities running multiple SKUs.

Floor Space: What Each Station Needs

Equipment footprints from spec sheets are misleading — they don't include operator access, film loading, or maintenance clearance. Budget these totals:

Station Total Space (with clearance)
Multihead weigher + VFFS ~4.0 × 3.5 m
Infeed conveyor 3–6 m length + 1.0 m each side
Checkweigher + metal detector ~3.0 × 2.0 m
Case packing area ~5.0 × 3.5 m
Complete line total 60–100 m²

Rule of thumb: minimum 1.0m clear aisle on all sides of every major machine. Film roll side needs 1.5m for roll changes. Electrical panels must be accessible without ducking under conveyors.

Ceiling Height: The Overlooked Constraint

Multihead weighers sit above VFFS machines, demanding 3.5–4.5m clear ceiling. If your ceiling is under 3m, you have two options: lower the weigher mounting height (accepting reduced throughput) or switch to a premade pouch system where weigher and filler sit at the same level. Measure before ordering — this catches more factory owners off guard than any other layout parameter.

Operator Positioning & Material Staging

  • Single supervision point: operator should see VFFS panel, checkweigher display, and accumulation conveyor without walking
  • Film roll storage: within 3m of VFFS — every extra meter adds seconds to every changeover, accumulating to measurable annual downtime
  • Raw material staging: positioned on infeed side with clear forklift access
  • Rejected product collection: within the supervision zone for immediate inspection

Four Layout Mistakes That Cost Real Money

1. Sizing for today's volume only. A line at exactly current capacity has zero growth headroom. Building in 15–25% conveyor speed margin costs little upfront; adding a second line later costs everything.

2. Placing VFFS against a wall. Saves 1.5m of floor space. Costs operator hours on every film change — crawling behind the machine instead of walking around it.

3. Conveyor height mismatches. VFFS discharges at 850mm, checkweigher infeed is 900mm — bags tumble, fragile products break. Specify all conveyor heights during layout planning, not after installation.

4. No space for future equipment. Secondary packaging automation is almost always the next investment. Leave 3–5m at the discharge end for a future case packer or palletizer — even if you're not buying it today.

Scalability: Planning for Three Years Ahead

Three decisions separate a layout that lasts five years from one that's obsolete in two:

  • Leave expansion zones at discharge end (secondary packaging) and infeed end (additional feeding capacity)
  • Size conveyors for the faster VFFS machine you might buy later — replacing undersized conveyors costs far more in downtime than the upfront price difference
  • Run utilities with spare capacity — 30% spare breaker slots, capped compressed air tees at both ends, drainage points positioned for future wet-cleaning stations. Adding utilities later means cutting concrete.

Layout Planning Checklist

Before engaging equipment suppliers, confirm: total floor space (L×W), ceiling height (measured, not estimated), product entry point, finished goods exit point, target throughput (current + 3-year projection), number of SKUs and changeover frequency, future equipment plans, utility locations (power/compressed air/drainage), and operator count per shift.

A packaging line that fits your floor plan on paper and one that works on a Monday morning at 7 AM with two operators and a rush order are not the same thing. Plan the space before you plan the machines. Browse our complete packaging line configurations or contact our engineering team with your floor plan — we'll propose a layout matched to your space and throughput targets.

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