A Branch-and-Price Algorithm for Facility Location with General Facility Cost Functions

Author(s):  
Wenjun Ni ◽  
Jia Shu ◽  
Miao Song ◽  
Dachuan Xu ◽  
Kaike Zhang

Most existing facility location models assume that the facility cost is either a fixed setup cost or made up of a fixed setup and a problem-specific concave or submodular cost term. This structural property plays a critical role in developing fast branch-and-price, Lagrangian relaxation, constant ratio approximation, and conic integer programming reformulation approaches for these NP-hard problems. Many practical considerations and complicating factors, however, can make the facility cost no longer concave or submodular. By removing this restrictive assumption, we study a new location model that considers general nonlinear costs to operate facilities in the facility location framework. The general model does not even admit any approximation algorithms unless P = NP because it takes the unsplittable hard-capacitated metric facility location problem as a special case. We first reformulate this general model as a set-partitioning model and then propose a branch-and-price approach. Although the corresponding pricing problem is NP-hard, we effectively analyze its structural properties and design an algorithm to solve it efficiently. The numerical results obtained from two implementation examples of the general model demonstrate the effectiveness of the solution approach, reveal the managerial implications, and validate the importance to study the general framework.

Algorithmica ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Grigoriev ◽  
Tim A. Hartmann ◽  
Stefan Lendl ◽  
Gerhard J. Woeginger

AbstractWe study a continuous facility location problem on a graph where all edges have unit length and where the facilities may also be positioned in the interior of the edges. The goal is to position as many facilities as possible subject to the condition that any two facilities have at least distance $$\delta$$ δ from each other. We investigate the complexity of this problem in terms of the rational parameter $$\delta$$ δ . The problem is polynomially solvable, if the numerator of $$\delta$$ δ is 1 or 2, while all other cases turn out to be NP-hard.


Proceedings ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sumrit ◽  
Thongsiriruengchai

The survival rate of the patients in medical emergencies depends on the minimize ambulance arrival time on-sites and promptly provides medical care to the patients. Advanced Life Support (ALS) ambulances play a critical role in reducing the fatal and severity rate of emergency patients. The several areas in big cities always encounter with traffic congestion, which is a significant obstacle for ALS ambulances to achieve their service time window target (predetermine as less than 8 min). In light of prior research, arranging appropriate parking locations can solve such a problem. This study proposes a mathematical model of facility location problem to identify the ALS ambulances parking locations. This paper simultaneously considers the minimize of the total number of ALS ambulance parking locations while covering the service areas and service time window are fulfilled. One part of business centers in Bangkok was chosen to correct the data and test the proposed model. This study is distinguished from others in these areas by the only possible parking places, i.e., schools, temples, police stations, and gas stations, which are taking into consideration. IBM ILOG CPLEX Optimization Studio Version 12.6.1 was utilized to solve the problem. The result indicates that there are 26 parking locations, which can enable the service coverage areas. As well as achieve a 54% service time window target.


2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-28
Author(s):  
Soumyajyoti Datta

Learning outcomes Familiarize with the retail operations of handicrafts, facility location problem, apply multi-criteria decision through the goal programming approach and solving the same with MS Excel. Case overview / synopsis The case portrays a dilemma in the context of retail operations of a small-scale handicraft company known as Odisha Craft. Located in Odisha, Susanta Mohanty, the owner, was finding it a challenge to decide on the most promising location for his new retail outlet in the neighbouring city of Kolkata. He had five choices for the locations. Odisha craft was established by his father-in-law in 2009 with an objective to preserve and promote the rich culture of the handicrafts designed by the local artisans and ensure sustainable rural livelihood. The company had been facing numerous challenges and the pandemic has given a very formidable blow to the monthly revenues. The case brings out the multi-faceted dilemma of deciding on the facility location in 2020, involving a set of conflicting criteria. The case unfolds a systematic solution approach resolving the dilemma using MS Excel. Complexity academic level Courses such as operations research, operations management, service operations and retail operations for MBA students and trainings for junior-middle level executives. Supplementary materials Teaching notes are available for educators only. Subject code CSS 09: Operations and Logistics


Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 670
Author(s):  
Alejandro Moya-Martínez ◽  
Mercedes Landete ◽  
Juan Francisco Monge

This paper introduces the concept of close-enough in the context of facility location. It is assumed that customers are willing to move from their homes to close-enough pickup locations. Given that the number of pickup locations is expanding every day, it is assumed that pickup locations can be placed everywhere. Conversely, the set of potential location for opening facilities is discrete as well as the set of customers. Opening facilities and pickup points entails an installation budget and a distribution cost to transport goods from facilities to customers and pickup locations. The (p,t)-Close-Enough Facility Location Problem is the problem of deciding where to locate p facilities among the finite set of candidates, where to locate t pickup points in the plane and how to allocate customers to facilities or to pickup points so that all the demand is satisfied and the total cost is minimized. In this paper, it is proved that the set of initial infinite number of pickup locations is finite in practice. Two mixed-integer linear programming models are proposed for the discrete problem. The models are enhanced with valid inequalities and a branch and price algorithm is designed for the most promising model. The findings of a comprehensive computational study reveal the performance of the different models and the branch and price algorithm and illustrate the value of pickup locations.


2006 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 427-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.J. Saameño Rodríguez ◽  
C. Guerrero García ◽  
J. Muñoz Pérez ◽  
E. Mérida Casermeiro

2019 ◽  
Vol 346 ◽  
pp. 3-14
Author(s):  
Fabio H.N. Abe ◽  
Edna A. Hoshino ◽  
Alessandro Hill ◽  
Roberto Baldacci

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