Line of Balance
Line of Balance
The LOB technique was created by the Goodyear Company in the early 1940s, before being adopted and
developed by the U.S. Navy in the early-1950s. It was subsequently developed for industrial manufacturing and
production control, as well as the basic concepts behind planning and scheduling in the construction industry.
An LOB diagram shows the repetitive project work as a single line on a graph. It differs from a bar chart which
shows a particular activity’s duration, by showing the rate at which the work has to be undertaken to stay
on schedule, as well as the relationship of one trade or process to the subsequent trade or process.
The project timeline is represented along the x-axis of the LOB diagram. The work areas that define
the project are represented along the y-axis. This is the starting point for the LOB schedule:
In the figure below, it can be seen that Activity A lasts a 10 weeks. The productivity of A, spread across each of
the work areas, is 2 weeks per floor.
If Activity B has a productivity rate of 1 week per floor, then it can begin work at the end of the second week.
As Activity B continues, at the end of the week 4 work can begin on the second floor; at the end of week
6 work can begin on the third floor, and so on. The horizontal red dashed lines represent the breaks
in Activity B work, where the workforce is waiting for Activity A to clear the way for them to continue. In this
example, starting Activity B as soon as possible will result in a lost productivity of 4 weeks.
The diagram below shows that by delaying the start of Activity B for 4 weeks, the workforce can continue
uninterrupted, and hence are more productive. This enables a better understanding of how workforces follow one
another through activities.