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DF2014:Workshop design

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This article is about an older version of DF.

Most workshops in the game are represented by 9 squares in a 3 by 3 square pattern. Some are 5 by 5 (Siege workshop), or 1 by 1 (Quern, Screw press, and Millstone). Getting a proper workflow is very important to the success and wealth of your fortress.

Laying out your workshops in the most efficient way possible is quite a scientific discipline. There are several points that should be considered.


Industries[edit]

Keeping workshops of a specific industry together is a great way to see if you need more workers creating booze or making leather toys. If you have all of the food-related workshops in a single room, you can tell with a glance that your cooks are slacking off.

Stockpiles[edit]

Just as you want your looms close to your clothier's shops, and your tanner's shop next to your butcher's shop, you will want logical stockpiles close to your workshops. It makes sense to put your raw food stockpile right next to the kitchen, so that your cook doesn't spend all of his time walking from one end of the fortress to the other. If the correct stockpile is close at hand, those roasts will be coming out of that kitchen in no time.

Artifacts[edit]

Using stocks[edit]

When a dwarf claims a workshop for their very own, there is a 50/50 chance of the artifact they're about to make being really awesome. They could make an artifact throne out of three lumps of bituminous coal, and it will be worth a whopping 4800 dwarf bucks. However, if you forbid every stone in your fortress, except for the natural platinum, they'll make you something very near a six-figure artifact.

There are a few ways to control what they choose - a start is to have the workshop that they claimed be in a room that is only reachable through a door. As soon as they claim it, lock the door so that they'll just sit there, yelling out the things they need. Now you can go on making only the items available that you want them to use (usually the most expensive). You can forbid unwanted items both from the stocks (may require highest precision achieved by your bookkeeper, especially for stones) or after they have collected them (will retask search for that item), dump items inside the workshop or near the door (the latter won't work if they have a preference). If you use mass-forbid, take good care to allow everything after the artifact is finished!

Artifact Construction Complex[edit]

An alternative solution is to build an Artifact Construction Complex, containing every mood-able workshop and small stockpiles of the most precious types of ore, metal bars, gems, etc. When not in use, the ACC should be either locked, or everything in it forbidden (including workshops). Forbidding is better, because in this case these workshops won't receive orders from your manager. You can also deal with it by filling the workshops' job queues with 10 suspended jobs. Once the dwarf is struck by the mood, the ACC is opened, and all claimable workshops not belonging to the ACC are forbidden. This way, the normal operation of the workshops is disrupted only for the time needed for the moody dwarf to claim a workshop, instead of all artifact construction time in the first method. Furthermore, only one type of workshop is nonoperational, instead of all workshops that use forbidden materials.

Tantrums[edit]

When the very worst happens and your triple-legendary dwarf fails their strange mood and goes on a rampage, destroying the faces of all the pets and dwarves around them, it's good to be prepared. The easiest form of protection is a simple door on the room the workshop is in, locked for the few months it takes for them to die of thirst. You can spend the time waiting for them to die by getting their coffin made and situated. Putting cage and weapon traps around the common stairs is always a good idea, for both tantrummers and possible invasions.

Workshop plans[edit]

Basement stockpiles[edit]

This design gives workshops easy access to input and output stockpiles.

   Level 1:              Level 2 (below, as shown, but could be above as well)
                                                                              
                                                
 WWWWWWWWWWWW            iiiiiiiiiiii                                   
 WWWWWWWWWWWW            iiiiiiiiiiii                                   
 WWWWWWWWWWWW            OiiiiiiOiiiiiiO                                   
 ..>>....>>..            ...<<.....<<...                                   
             OooooooOooooooO                                   
                            oooooooooooo                                   
 W = workshop               oooooooooooo                                   
 i = input item                                                
 o = output item                                                              

Alternatively you can place input above and output below the workshops or the other way round, depending, for example, on the location of your trade depot, or other workshops involved in the chain of production. Additional stairs may be useful.

3x3 rooms[edit]

This design makes it easier to contain berserk dwarves.

(Beware access may be blocked depending on a workshop's pattern of internal impassable tiles. Different workshops have different internal patterns of passable and impassable floor tiles. When building a workshop, Dwarf Fortress indicates which tiles are passable/impassable by pattern of light/dark green X's. The central tile is always passable, so for those using tilesets, similar tiles to the middle tile are passable.)

 ..          
 WWWWWW..          
 WWWWWW..          
 WWWWWW..          
 ..          
 ....X......          
 ..          
 WWWWWW..          
 WWWWWW..          
 WWWWWW..          
 ..          
 W = workshop         
 X = up/down staircase
 . = floor            

Access and stockpiles are placed above and below the room. Similar workshops can be grouped together for easier checking on, and doors can be locked should a moody dwarf's wishes be unmet. This concept can be used for your entire fortress:

Below you can see a piece from around the central staircase, to see how the design should start. Notice that it is pretty modular, you can have two workshops pushed together, or you can separate them all, and you have a couple options on how you set up your entrances, connecting two workshops with one door, or leaving them with separate entrances. Up to you. Notice the initial diagonal terminates at a workshop, and starts the grid pattern.

 WWW.```.WWW`
 WWW..WWW`
 WWW.WWW.WWW`
 .WWW.
 ......WWW.......
 
 WWWWWW.O.WWWWWW
 WWWWWWOXOWWWWWW
 WWWWWW.O.WWWWWW
 
 ......WWW.......
 .WWW.
 WWW.WWW.WWW`
 WWW..WWW`
 WWW.WWW.WWW`
 .WWW.`
 ````.WWW.`````
 ````..`````

The floors alternate workshop/storage. On workshop floors the diagonals immediate to the main stairway are mined out a couple spaces to make room for the first workshops; around those you can start mining in straight lines and start a grid pattern. For storage floors you can leave a wall of stone around the staircase with only one or two walls mined out for access; then mine out everything around it. On the ground level you start by mining into a cave, clear out space for a trade depot, and mine out one spot where you build a single downward staircase; here the entire fortress starts. It works great and is very efficient, though it takes a while to get setup right.

Decentralized Workshop Complex[edit]

Designed for use with the decentralized living plan, this plan emphasizes fine-grained planning with many small, specific stockpiles and planned workshop quarters. It therefore requires some micro-management to get going. However, once you have it working, things work extremely smoothly and you should never have a significant delay in production again.

Workshops.GIF

Total workshop loadout for 1 floor:

  • Sixteen (16) 3x3 workshops
  • Four (4) 4x3 workshops
  • Two (2) 5x5 workshops

Maximum walk to stockpile on same wing: 18.

The light gray crosses are optional doors. They can be useful for sealing off a Kitchen or Butcher's Shop to keep miasma from annoying the neighbors. Beyond that, the blue field is the stairwell access (recommend separate up stairs and down stairs for safety reasons), and the gray fields are stockpiles.

4x3 workshops are useful for workshops with strange blocked square formations (the Bowyer's shop is an example). They can also be nice for setting up a tiny 1x2 or 1x3 stockpile for a specific workshop - with bins, this can be a significant reserve of material. Imagine a Clothier or Leatherworker with 3 full bins of cloth or leather right next to them.

The 5x5 workshops are useful for shops, kennels, and siege workshops. You can even put your trade depot in one of them if you've got a mind to. Maintaining proper security can be a nightmare in that situation (remember that trolls and others can break down doors and floodgates), but if you manage to get it done it can be a trader's dream come true. They can also be useful for making a specialty shop with a few stockpiles designed to accomplish only one thing (encrusting statues with gems, for example).

The 3x3 workshops are best organized into wings, where a pair of workshops share a similar function with the pair directly next to them. They share stockpile space better this way. When set up correctly, less than 10 dwarves will regularly use each stockpile room, so traffic is a non-issue. There tends to be a lot of dwarves in the halls, though, because peasant haulers visit the workshops frequently, hence the 3-wide corridors.

Finally, this design offers lots and lots of wall space for smoothing and engraving. Free wealth is good.

Interconnected 6x6 rooms with stockpiles[edit]

             
 .****..****.            
 **..****..**            
 *....**....*            
 *....**....*            
 **..****..**            
 .****..****.            
             
 .****..****.            
 **..****..**            
 *....**....*            
 *....**....*            
 **..****..**            
 .****..****. * = pathway
             

In this design, each room functions as workshop, hallway, and stockpile. A workshop is placed near the center of each room, preferably so that only a walkable tile overlaps the (*) pathways. The pathways form a virtual double-wide diagonal hallway, allowing dwarves to move through the fortress easily. The pathways, as well as the remainder of each room, are filled with the appropriate stockpiles. Each room should have at least one set of stairs for easy access to adjacent z-levels.

Each workshop has a short path to several nearby workshops on the same and other z-levels, allowing for a lot of flexibility in which workshops are placed in which rooms. Each room is also lockable if necessary. Optionally, the corner can be replaced with a door to allow faster movement between diagonally adjacent workshops.

Fluid workshop locations[edit]

Alternatively, you can employ a "work site" methodology where workshops are constructed and destroyed as necessary. For example, if you mine out a huge dining hall and it is completely filled with stone, build a masonry shop in the hall to manufacture tables and chairs. This eliminates the need for a stone hauler because your mason only has to travel a few squares to get raw material. In addition it makes furniture hauling more efficient because the tables and chairs are right next to their eventual location. And of course it clears stone out of your dining hall, eliminating the need for a refuse hauler to dump it all.

Smelting Operations[edit]

In very resource-heavy maps, 10-12 smelters may be necessary to keep up with mining operations. The stairways lead down into a high Z-level mining operation (keeps the noise away from the bedrooms, too), with additional bar storage 1-2 levels below. One or more magma forges would be down the hall from the bar stockpiles.

                                                     
      SMSSMSSMSSMS                                               
      SSSSSSSSSSSS                                               
      SSSSSSSSSSSS                                               
      OOOOOOOOOOOO                                               
      OOOOOOOOOOOO                                               
      OOOOOOOOOOOO                                               
                                                     
      ............                                               
      ............                                        
      ........OOOSMS                                        
      ..>>BBBB..OOOSSS                                        
 ...>>BBBB...OOOSSS                                        
 .........BBBBBB...OOOSMS                                        
 .........BBBBBB...OOOSSS                                        
 .........BBBBBB...OOOSSS                                        
 ...BBBB>>...OOOSMS                                        
      ..BBBB>>..OOOSSS                                        
      ........OOOSSS                                        
      ............                                        
      ............                                               
                                                     
      OOOOOOOOOOOO                                               
      OOOOOOOOOOOO                                               
      OOOOOOOOOOOO                                               
      SMSSMSSMSSMS                                               
      SSSSSSSSSSSS                                               
      SSSSSSSSSSSS                                               
                                                     
 *S = Smelter                                                      
 *M = Magma access (lines up with unpassable tile on magma smelter)
 *B = Bar Stockpile                                                
 *O = Ore Stockpile                                                

Pillars[edit]

See Midna's page on pillar design.

Organics processing complex[edit]

Big squares are 7x7, smaller squares are 3x3, black squares are workshops and colored rectangles are stockpiles

This is a nice, rectangular design which puts the food/drink industry, and the many other industries that feed of its by-products, together in one neat arrangement.

The green stockpile should accept brewable plants, and plants which can be processed: Pig tails, cave wheat, sweet pod, quarry bush, dimple cup, kobold bulb, longland grass, valley herb, rope reed, blade weed, hide root, sliver barb, whip vine. The red stockpile should accept their products. Optionally, an 8 tile stockpile can be placed around the quern which holds the millable plants.

Expansion options include a finished good stockpile to the right, a soap stockpile nearby if you make a lot of soap, a stone stockpile below the bone one for input into crafters and masons/mechanics, a wood stockpile below which feeds into the same furniture stockpile as the mechanics and masons, and a jeweler. With the latter additions, the craftsdwarves can now decorate furniture as well as finished goods with bones and (if you include the jeweler) gems.

Also, this plan is only meant to expand to the right and bottom-right. So you can safely plug its top and left sides flush with the rest of your fortress without worrying about future expansion. The number of workshops should be sufficient for all but the largest forts.