The discrete time/cost trade-off problem under various assumptions exact and heuristic procedures
Vanhoucke, Mario ; Debels, Dieter
Vanhoucke, Mario
Debels, Dieter
Citations
Altmetric:
Publication Type
Working paper
Editor
Supervisor
Publication Year
2005
Journal
Book
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
25
Publication Begin page
Publication End page
Publication Number of pages
51
Collections
Abstract
Time/cost trade-offs in project networks have been the subject of extensive research since the development of the critical path method (CPM) in the late 50s. Time/cost behaviour in a project activity basically describes the trade-off between the duration of the activity and its amount of non-renewable resources (e.g. money) committed to it. In the discrete version of the problem (the discrete time/cost trade-off problem), it is generally accepted that the trade-off follows a discrete non-increasing pattern, i.e. expediting an activity is possible by allocating more resources (i.e. at a larger cost) to it. However, due to its complexity (the problem is known to be NP hard (see De et al. (1997)), the problem has been solved for relatively small instances. In this paper, we elaborate on three extensions of the well-known discrete time/cost trade-off problem in order to cope with more realistic settings: time/switch constraints, work continuity constraints and net present value maximization. We give an extensive literature overview of existing procedures for these problem types, and present an exact solution approach for the work continuity version, which is not being investigated yet. Moreover, we discuss a new meta-heuristic approach in order to provide near-optimal heuristic solutions for the different problems. We present computational results for the problems under study by comparing the results for both exact and heuristic procedures. We demonstrate that the heuristic algorithms produce consistently good results for two versions of the discrete time/cost trade-off problem.
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Programme & Portfolio Management