Abstract

Aim: The article presents the results of research on the evacuation process of people from the building of the Faculty of Environmental and Power Engineering of the Silesian University of Technology, including the evacuation of people with a temporary limitation of independent movement, who are evacuated using an evacuation chair. The travel times and the time needed to prepare an evacuation chair were examined. Based on the research, the average speeds of movement of the studied populations were determined.

Project and methods: Twelve evacuation experiments were carried out in three different user populations of the building. The experiments included the analysis of the times of movement of people without disabilities; people with temporary disabilities who move independently on crutches and a population in which there was one person with temporary reduced mobility, who was evacuated using an evacuation chair. Six of the experiments concerned the evacuation from the fourth floor of the building, three of which were proceeded through the main staircase and the remaining three through the side staircase. The next six experiments were carried out from the second floor, also split into two different staircases. Each experiment ended when all people reached the meeting point near the building.

Results: The lowest values of the average total travel time were recorded for the population without disabilities. The shortest average travel time was 83 seconds and concerned the evacuation of the population without disabilities from the second floor, evacuating through a side staircase (K1). In all the experiments, the person on crutches was the slowest to move, for whom the evacuation times were the longest. The maximum average time for a person on crutches was 342 seconds to evacuate from the fourth floor via the main staircase. Evacuation with an emergency chair improved the process by 10.47% for the evacuation from the second floor using K1 staircase, and for the evacuation with this staircase from the 4th floor by 28.71%. For the main staircase (K2), the experiments conducted from the second floor using an evacuation chair took 40.02% less time than an independent evacuation of a person with crutches and 47.07% less time when evacuating from the fourth floor.

Conclusions: Interpreting the results obtained in the experiments, it can be stated that the evacuation using an evacuation chair improved the evacuation process compared to the experiments in which a person temporarily disabled was walking independently on crutches. People without disabilities evacuate the fastest. The analysis of the time of travel made it possible to determine the average speed of movement of the analyzed populations, which can be used as a model value to perform an evacuation simulation.

Keywords: evacuation, evacuation time, people with disabilities, evacuation chair

Type of article: short scientific report

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