Isovists compactness and stairs as predictors of evacuation route choice

Author:

Snopková Dajana1,De Cock Laure2,Juřík Vojtěch3,Kvarda Ondřej1,Tancoš Martin4,Herman Lukáš1,Kubíček Petr1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University

2. Department of Geography, Ghent University

3. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts, Masaryk University

4. Interdisciplinary Research Team on Internet and Society, Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University

Abstract

Abstract The building design is a crucial factor that can be actively adjusted and optimized to prevent human and property threats in emergency scenarios. Previous research suggests that specific building layouts may significantly influence human behaviour during evacuation. However, detailed empirical data about human behaviour in various types of buildings with different layouts are still missing and only marginal recommendations from this field are reflected in actual construction practice. In this study, desktop VR technologies were employed to study human decision-making in problematic T-intersections in the context of an emergency evacuation. More specifically, we studied fundamental attributes of buildings such as the width and length of the corridors and the presence of stairs to explore how they influence the choice of the evacuation route. The space-syntax isovist method was used to describe spatial parameters of corridors, which makes the results applicable to all buildings. Behavioural data from 208 respondents were analysed using multilevel regression models. Our results support previous claims concerning the importance of specific spatial layouts of evacuation corridors because respondents systematically chose wider and shorter corridors with visible staircases as the preferred evacuation route. The present findings further promote the ongoing discussion on the design of marked evacuation routes and building design that takes human factors into consideration.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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