For the new version of the Dutch design guidelines for buildings, a threshold value for the capacity of emergency doors needs to be set. Innovative largescale laboratory experiments have been performed to investigate the capacity of emergency doors during evacuation conditions. This paper focuses in particular on the relation between capacity and the independent variables doorway width, population composition, stress level and presence of an open door. It turned out that only the experiment with the widest doorway (275 cm) resulted in a capacity lower than the capacity from the current design guidelines (2.25 P/m/s). The average observed capacities are for all widths lowest for the lowest stress level and highest for the highest stress leve...
Door width is one of the important factors to concern in layout or facilities design because it affe...
Buildings should be designed so that evacuation can be done safely in case of fire or other cause wo...
In a pioneering work in Nature journal, a counter-intuitive prediction that escape rates of people u...
AbstractIn this paper, we show how the capacity of evacuation doors is affected by the evacuation do...
According to the Dutch building regulations, called Building Decree, 135 persons per minute should b...
The maximum pulling and pushing forces of a sample of 750 persons between 20 and 30 and over 50 year...
In previous regulations a 1,20-meter-wide door in large halls could be exchanged with two 0,90-meter...
The effective width model was introduced to show how the flow was linearly proportional to the effec...
AbstractThis paper presents the characteristics of pedestrian movement around doors connected to cor...
Predicting evacuees’ exit-door selection is important for architects and fire engineers. Existing mo...
Many cities in Japan are located in alluvial plains, and the vulnerability of urbanized areas to flo...
The article studies the dependence of the human flow density on two main parameters: the width of th...
This paper challenges the currently assumed linear relationship between doorway width and achievable...
Doors are frequently inconvenient to people who are burdened or lack physical agility or strength. T...
In the last decades, a series of terrible accidents happened within pedestrian crowds, which makes c...
Door width is one of the important factors to concern in layout or facilities design because it affe...
Buildings should be designed so that evacuation can be done safely in case of fire or other cause wo...
In a pioneering work in Nature journal, a counter-intuitive prediction that escape rates of people u...
AbstractIn this paper, we show how the capacity of evacuation doors is affected by the evacuation do...
According to the Dutch building regulations, called Building Decree, 135 persons per minute should b...
The maximum pulling and pushing forces of a sample of 750 persons between 20 and 30 and over 50 year...
In previous regulations a 1,20-meter-wide door in large halls could be exchanged with two 0,90-meter...
The effective width model was introduced to show how the flow was linearly proportional to the effec...
AbstractThis paper presents the characteristics of pedestrian movement around doors connected to cor...
Predicting evacuees’ exit-door selection is important for architects and fire engineers. Existing mo...
Many cities in Japan are located in alluvial plains, and the vulnerability of urbanized areas to flo...
The article studies the dependence of the human flow density on two main parameters: the width of th...
This paper challenges the currently assumed linear relationship between doorway width and achievable...
Doors are frequently inconvenient to people who are burdened or lack physical agility or strength. T...
In the last decades, a series of terrible accidents happened within pedestrian crowds, which makes c...
Door width is one of the important factors to concern in layout or facilities design because it affe...
Buildings should be designed so that evacuation can be done safely in case of fire or other cause wo...
In a pioneering work in Nature journal, a counter-intuitive prediction that escape rates of people u...