The Principles of Scientific Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1919
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 144
UDK: 658.01 Tay
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78 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
a step or two toward the pile of bricks and back
again each time a brick is laid.
He studied the best height for the mortar box
and brick pile, and then designed a scaffold, with a
table on it, upon which all of the materials are placed,
so as to keep the bricks, the mortar, the man, and
the wall in their proper relative positions. These
scaffolds are adjusted, as the wall grows in height,
for all of the bricklayers by a laborer especially
detailed for this purpose, and by this means the
bricklayer is saved the exertion of stooping down to
the level of his feet for each brick and each trowel-
ful of mortar and then straightening up again.
Think of the waste of effort that has gone on through
all these years, with each bricklayer lowering his
body, weighing, say, 150 pounds, down two feet
and raising it up again every time a brick (weigh-
ing about 5 pounds) is laid in the wall! And this
each bricklayer did about one thousand times a day.
As a result of further study, after the bricks are
unloaded from the cars, and before bringing them to
the bricklayer, they are carefully sorted by a laborer,
and placed with their best edge up on a simple
wooden frame, constructed so as to enable him
to take hold of each brick in the quickest time
and in the most advantageous position. In this
way the bricklayer avoids either having to turn
the brick over or end for end to examine it before
laying it, and he saves, also, the time taken in decid-
ing which is the best edge and end to place on the
outside of the wall. In most cases, also, he saves