1 / 18

Emergency Evacuation: Interior Design/Improved Passenger Flow

Result of a BriteEuram project. Emergency Evacuation: Interior Design/Improved Passenger Flow. BriteEuram project “Mustering & Evacuation of Passengers”. Scope of MEPdesign. Human factor research at TNO New design features and signposting at DMI

leia
Download Presentation

Emergency Evacuation: Interior Design/Improved Passenger Flow

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Result of a BriteEuram project Emergency Evacuation: Interior Design/Improved Passenger Flow Rolf Skjong & Louis C. Boer

  2. BriteEuram project“Mustering & Evacuation of Passengers” Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  3. Scope of MEPdesign • Human factor research at TNO • New design features and signposting at DMI • Scaled test of lifeboats and liferafts in wave tank at KTH • Software - including HF data at QUASAR • Prediction and Exercise - QUASAR/Scandlines • Guidance & Evaluation of pragmatic value DNV/IFN • This presentation: • Mainly the HF research relevant to interior design • Full presentation: TIEMS - International Conference on Emergency Management, OSLO, June 19-22 Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  4. Ready to embark? (Rutgersson & Tsychkova, Stockholm) Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  5. All passengers to their Assembly Stations! • A measure of precaution • passenger flow should be smooth and orderly • which is a function of • passengers aims & goals • … walking speed • … and guidance provided Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  6. Walking speed …while the platform moves • List/trim • Pitching & Rolling • Floor/Stair • Age slows down • 33% extra time due to ship motion • 33 % extra time due to list (15-20O) • Circ.909 optimistic Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  7. Way-finding guidance • Posting crewmembers at strategic locations • ... not always an option • real incident = chaos • evacuation time for exercises = 10.5 minutes • evacuation time for real incidents = 20 minutes (data of ICCL) Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  8. Way-finding on signs alone • TNO, 1993, 100% more time required (intern’l ferry) • TNO, 1998, studies (mock-ups of ship interior) Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  9. Way-finding on board ship • Deck horizontal -- listed 15o • normal lighting -- dark • alone -- in groups • … behaviour recorded on camera Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  10. Too many way-finding errors • Passage doors are psychological barriers Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  11. Improve for human visual perception • Avoid visual “noise” of layout, advertisements • Use “lean” symbols • Avoid symbol conflict • ... Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  12. Improve for human visual perception • Use “lean” symbols • Avoid symbol conflict • Avoid poor placement Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  13. Improve for human visual perception • Avoid poor placement (ambiguous guidance) Should passengers go up or down? Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  14. Improve for human visual perception • Avoid poor placement (misleading guidance) The arrow suggests to turn right to the “Salon”, but turning left is intended. Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  15. Experimental guidance systems • arrowheads on the skirting board (very helpful) • walking light (needs improvement) • special markings Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  16. Experimental guidance systems • arrowheads on the skirting board • walking light • special markings (very helpful) • suitable measures prevent 90% of way-finding errors Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  17. Improve guidance • Clear & authoritative PA • Clear & authoritative assistance of crew • Symbols and signs improved for human perception • Remove visual “noise” • Ensure correct interpretation (no poor and ambiguous placement--guidelines required) • Limit choice points in assembly route to minimum • If passage door necessary, remove “fear of doors” • Make fire-doors recognisable for the public • Assembly routes NOT through areas normally forbidden • In brief: Use Human Factor knowledge Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

  18. Gap List • We have focused on improvement • Should look into probabilities of each scenario • Should look into cost • In brief: Should carry out a formal safety assessment • Software implementation would be nice to have, but is not crucial for improvements. • Current software short of HE knowledge - optimistic Emergency Evacuation: Improve Passenger Flow

More Related