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Scottish company
with software that models emergency evacuations says sales
have surged in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
(Image courtesy of IES, Ltd)
Prior to those events, Simulex,
from Integrated Environmental Solutions Ltd., Glasgow, was
finding a niche among planners tweaking designs for faster,
safer evacuations. But sales jumped 60% in the months following
the attacks, says product creator, Peter Thompson, IES's software
development manager.
Thompson says Simulex is based
on observations of people working their way out of crowded
spaces. "We measured walk-speeds, changes of direction,
overtaking, body twists and the way one person slows down
because of the obstruction of the person in front," he
says. The program places simulated people individually in
the CAD plans of a structure's floors and stairwells and then
directs them to evacuate.
"It's a good piece
of software," says Norris Harvey, senior mechanical engineer
with New York-based Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade & Douglas
Inc. The firm has used Simulex to study subway platform and
tunnel evacuations. "We put 2,000 to 4,000 people in
a station," he says, "Then you do the simulation
and watch those guys get up and run out."
Information can be found at:
http://www.ies4d.com/VESystem/VE-Evacuation/simulex/simulex.htm
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| (Illustration
by Nancy Soulliard for ENR) |
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