Jane Embury explains how skybridges, along with modern glazing systems, play a significant role in evacuations.

The Bridge of Sighs and Evacuation Models

Skybridges, along with modern glazing systems, play a significant role in evacuations.

Legend has it that prisoners would sigh as they crossed it, on their short journey to a life behind bars.  Nowadays, the Ponte dei Sospiri, or Bridge of Sighs, is one of Venice’s star tourist attractions. Built in 1600, the bridge joins what was the Prigioni Nuove, or new prison, to interrogation rooms in the Doge’s Palace across the canal.  The view from the bridge was the last glimpse of the outside world that prisoners would see, prompting Lord Byron to poetically name the bridge.

But the Bridge of Sighs, built for the mundane purpose of transporting people from one building to another, also has one further claim to fame.  It is the world’s first skybridge.But the Bridge of Sighs, built for the mundane purpose of transporting people from one building to another, also has one further claim to fame.  It is the world’s first skybridge.

Once a common architectural feature joining skyscrapers in New York, they not only joined tall buildings – often owned by the same company – but provided a horizontal means of escape in the event of fire.

Nowadays, we think solely about escape in vertical terms, usually downwards to street level.  But, the skybridge concept has not been totally forgotten; Manhattan still boasts a number of the historic structures.

The best current example is between the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.  They were the tallest buildings in the world between 1998 and 2004, and remain the tallest twin towers internationally. A double-deck skybridge connects the two towers on the 41st and 42nd floors.  The skybridge isn’t actually joined to either tower, being designed to slide in and out of them as the towers sway several feet in strong winds. For the Petronas Towers, the skybridge provides an innovative fire safety feature, while also being an iconic feature of the conjoined buildings.

Simply, as we build higher into the sky, with super-tall buildings set to dwarf anything constructed today, designers and fire engineers have to look again at features like skybridges in evacuation planning. More than anything, they have to revisit the computational models used to predict how a building can be safely evacuated in the event of a fire.

Those models test design configurations to determine whether a building’s safety characteristics are adequate, from the number of evacuation routes to the width of exit doors.  The trouble, of course, is that evacuation involves the movement of people – and the behaviour of flesh-and-blood humans can’t so easily be predicted.

It’s all about psychology and how we process information.  We respond to information from our physical and social environments and, based on what we perceive, we then decide what to do.  In other words, hearing a fire alarm is not enough to make everyone in a building immediately move to an exit.

Office buildings are generally the easiest to evacuate.  Staff have typically been trained in evacuation procedures, are dressed and awake, and able to make informed decisions.  On the downside, many modern office buildings are open plan, making it harder to contain the fire within a small area.

Residential buildings, which include hotels, pose a different dynamic.  People can be asleep, not dressed, and have only limited knowledge of escape routes.  That can seriously extend evacuation times and, worse, lead to re-entry behaviour – for example, to retrieve valuables.

Most challenging are escape strategies for healthcare facilities where the occupant population will include people of limited mobility and therefore unable to perform self-rescue.

Nor is physical impediment simply about age or infirmity.  As buildings are increasing in height, our physical abilities are diminishing.  The buildings in which we live and work are getting taller, while we are getting fatter and more unfit.  That has ramifications for evacuation procedures, and the length of time to exit a building – something that designers and fire engineers will be researching further.

Evacuation models have been used for some time to estimate the time taken to evacuate a building and are a requirement of fire safety and building approval.  But research at the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), among others, demonstrates that those computer models don’t necessarily reflect the variable nature of human reaction.

In other words, computer modelling can only take us so far in designing in safety.  What is also needed is an understanding of human behaviour in an emergency situation, particularly the factors that have been shown to influence our decision-making processes.  By understanding those factors and processes, a fire safety team can develop a more comprehensive – and predictive – behaviour model for a building’s fire evacuation.

Those predictions have to cover “exit choice behaviour” – the different exits that people will choose to leave by, often because they’re also the entrances and routes by which they arrive at work.  In other words, not maybe the closest exit.

Nor does it model “pre-movement times” – the period immediately following a fire alarm, when the fire has been detected but doesn’t yet pose a threat.  Simply, people don’t always regard an alarm as an immediate call to action.  Many will assume it’s a false alarm or a fire drill, and do nothing.

It adds up to a building evacuation that may be greatly delayed, or patchy in nature.  Recent research indicates that this “pre-movement time” is a more significant evacuation factor than the length of time taken to reach an exit.  As much as two-thirds of the time it takes people to exit a building after an alarm is start-up time – time wasted in looking for more information.

 All of those factors, and many other variables, can influence estimates of evacuation times, and therefore the level of protection within a building to safely allow the occupant population to escape.

Those calculations have never been more important, with a whole raft of super-tall buildings being built, mostly in the Middle East and Asia.  The tallest of them all, on which work has begun, is the £780 million Kingdom Tower in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia which will stand at just over 1,000 metres and have 200 storeys.  It will be three times higher than London’s Shard, Europe’s tallest building, and 173 metres taller than Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, currently the world’s tallest building – with 160 storeys.

Modern glazing systems are now an integral part of fire protection strategy, providing up to 120 minutes of protection against radiant heat or toxic gases – giving everyone, however infirm or slow, more than enough time to exit a building.  Building in time is what glazing systems can do; and time-to-exit saves lives.

High-tech fire suppression systems, refuge floors, protected elevators and well-designed staircases all have a part to play in modern evacuation planning.  But the role that advanced glazing systems have is also a vital element, and we’re pleased that our systems can now be found in buildings great and small across the world.

Maybe, sometime, we’ll also supply systems for a new generation of skybridges.

**

Bridge of Sighs image courtesy of www.bridgeofsighs.info

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