Takt planning and takt production

Takt Planning in Practice: Apartment Building Schedule 4 Weeks Faster

Takt planning is not just a new way to draw a schedule. When done correctly, it helps improve the flow of construction production, eliminate waiting, and make site progress more predictable. In this article, we walk through a practical example of an apartment building project where the schedule can be compressed by 4 weeks without simply forcing work phases into unrealistically shorter durations.

Takt production 8 min read

Construction project schedules often have the same basic problem: the overall schedule looks reasonable, but in day-to-day site operations, production does not progress as a steady flow. One work phase waits for the previous one, another is delayed due to a lack of resources, and a third starts in an area that is not yet truly ready.

The goal of takt planning is to change this. Instead of building the schedule around individual tasks and long buffers, the site is divided into recurring takt areas and the work phases are arranged to move from one area to another at an agreed rhythm.

Starting point: a 6-storey apartment building project

Imagine a typical residential apartment building project where the interior finishing phase has been planned using a traditional location-based schedule. The project includes six residential floors, a stairwell, wet rooms, apartment interior works, and the final MEP finishing phases.

In the original schedule, the interior finishing phase is planned to take 20 weeks. The schedule includes several overlapping work phases, but progress is not evenly paced. Some floors are completed and then wait for the next crew, while bottlenecks occur in other areas.

Initial situation in the example

Original interior finishing schedule: 20 weeks. Target after takt planning: 16 weeks. The schedule is accelerated by 4 weeks by improving production flow, not by unrealistically tightening the durations of individual work phases.

Step 1: divide the project into clear takt areas

The first step is to define the takt areas. In an apartment building project, natural takt areas may include floors, stairwells, groups of apartments, or wet-room lines. What matters is that the areas are sufficiently balanced in size from a production perspective.

If one takt area contains significantly more work than the others, it begins to slow down the entire production flow. For this reason, takt areas should not be defined only based on drawings or floor divisions, but also from the perspective of workload and resources.

In the example project, floor-specific residential areas and separate wet-room groups are selected as takt areas. This allows the progress of work phases to be planned so that the same crew moves in a controlled way from one area to the next without constant waiting.

Step 2: create work packages

Next, the work phases are grouped into work packages. A work package should be clear enough that its prerequisites, responsible person, duration, and completion criteria can be defined.

In the interior finishing phase of an apartment building project, work packages may include, for example:

  • partition wall works
  • MEP rough-in phase
  • filling and painting works
  • tiling and wet-room works
  • cabinet and fixture installations
  • flooring works
  • trim work and finishing
  • inspections and handover preparation

A good work package is neither too large nor too small. If the work package is too broad, it is difficult to manage. If it is too detailed, the schedule becomes heavy to maintain.

Step 3: define the takt time

Takt time defines the rhythm at which work packages move from one takt area to another. It may be, for example, one day, two days, one week, or another interval suitable for the project.

In an apartment building project, a takt time that is too short may cause constant rushing and incomplete handovers from one crew to the next. A takt time that is too long, on the other hand, leaves unnecessary waiting in production.

In the example project, a one-week takt time is selected. This suits the size of the project and the nature of the work packages: crews have enough time to complete an area, while progress still remains steady and easy to monitor.

The purpose of takt time is not to force all work phases into the same mold, but to find a rhythm for production in which work flows as evenly as possible from one area to another.

Step 4: identify bottlenecks

Once the takt areas, work packages, and takt time have been defined, bottlenecks start to become visible in the schedule. A bottleneck may be a work phase that takes longer than others, requires scarce resources, or needs several preceding tasks to be completed before it can begin.

In the example project, the completion of wet rooms is identified as the bottleneck. Tiling, waterproofing, drying times, inspections, and fixture installations form a chain whose delay quickly affects the entire interior finishing phase.

A bottleneck is not solved simply by putting more pressure on the schedule. Instead, the work is reviewed: can the area division be changed, can resources be balanced, can prerequisites be secured earlier, or can inspections be paced more effectively?

Step 5: balance the flow

The greatest benefit of takt planning comes from leveling production. When work packages are arranged to flow from one takt area to another, crew waiting time is reduced and the site’s situational awareness improves.

In the example project, the original schedule contains several points where crews cannot continue to the next area because the preceding work phase is not complete. On the other hand, in some areas work phases overlap too tightly, increasing disruption and the risk of quality deviations.

With a takt schedule, work phases are rearranged so that each crew has a clear next area and each area receives the right work at the right time. This reduces both idle time and overlapping work.

Step 6: secure prerequisites for starting work

A takt schedule only works if tasks are ready to start when they are supposed to start. For this reason, takt planning should be combined with weekly planning, constraint management, and Last Planner-style commitment management.

Before a work package is released to production, the following should be verified, for example:

  • are the plans complete and approved?
  • are materials available?
  • is the preceding work phase complete?
  • has the area been handed over to the next crew?
  • have the required inspections been completed?
  • does the subcontractor have the right resources at the right time?

Without this step, the takt schedule can easily become just a new version of the old schedule: visually cleaner, but just as unreliable from a production perspective.

How was the schedule accelerated by 4 weeks?

The shorter schedule did not come from assigning unrealistically short durations to individual work phases. Instead, the acceleration came from four factors.

First, the takt areas were defined so that the workload was distributed more evenly. Second, the work packages were arranged in a clear sequence. Third, bottlenecks were identified before production started. Fourth, weekly planning and constraint management ensured that work phases were ready to start at the right time.

Result of the example

Original interior finishing phase: 20 weeks. After takt planning: 16 weeks. Saving: 4 weeks. The greatest benefit came from reducing waiting, overlaps, and bottlenecks.

Why is Excel not always enough for takt planning?

A takt schedule can be started in Excel, and in many organizations it is the first step. As the project size grows and the schedule changes continuously, Excel’s limitations quickly become apparent.

Making changes manually takes time. Dependencies do not update automatically. Version control becomes difficult. In addition, real-time site status is missing unless progress data is updated separately.

Modern takt planning software helps build, update, and monitor the takt schedule in a single view. When the plan changes, the impacts are visible immediately. When production progresses, actual progress can be connected directly to the plan.

How does L-Planner support takt planning?

L-Planner helps combine takt planning, weekly planning, and production control into the same practical process. It can be used to plan work packages, track task progress, manage constraints, and improve planning reliability.

In takt planning, the most important thing is not just drawing the schedule. The most important thing is that site stakeholders understand what happens next, what prerequisites are required to start work, and how deviations are addressed in time.

When the takt schedule and weekly planning are in the same system, the plan does not remain a detached document. It becomes part of daily production management.

Summary

Takt planning can significantly accelerate the schedule of an apartment building project, but the benefit does not come merely from compressing the schedule. The real impact comes from improving production flow, removing bottlenecks, and ensuring prerequisites for starting work.

In the practical example, the interior finishing phase was reduced from 20 weeks to 16 weeks. The four-week acceleration was achieved by making the progress of work phases more even and easier to control.

Takt planning works best when it is not merely a planning-stage exercise, but part of the site’s continuous production control. This is why the right tools, shared situational awareness, and a clear management process matter greatly.

Would you like to see how a takt schedule is built in L-Planner?

L-Planner helps turn takt planning into practical production control. Book a demo and see how an apartment building schedule can be built, updated, and managed in one system.

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