Urban scenarios modifications due to the earthquake: ruins formation criteria and interactions with pedestrians' evacuation
Authored by Marco D'Orazio, Luca Spalazzi, Enrico Quagliarini, Gabriele Bernardini, Chiara Wazinski
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10518-016-9872-0
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
EDamCal
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
One of the most influencing elements in inhabitants' earthquake safety
definition is represented by the interactions between people and
post-event environment in urban scenarios. Understanding and simulating
rules for pedestrians' motion in earthquake evacuation could be useful
to inquire the risk assessment introducing the ``human{''} factor
influence: integrated ``risk maps{''} could be realized by combining
results of similar analyses with the traditional site hazard, buildings
vulnerability and exposition indices. This work proposes an innovative
approach based on the analysis of these interactions. Two
experimentally-based activities are required: an analysis of human
behaviors towards the post-earthquake environment; a relation for
defining environmental modifications. Results firstly show a summary of
man-environment interactions in earthquake evacuations. A possible
criterion for path choice in evacuation is also numerically defined. A
theoretical agent-based model is developed on these bases and summarizes
phases, motion rules and man-environment interactions in earthquake
pedestrians' evacuation in urban scenarios. Secondly, quick criteria for
scenario modifications involving ruins formation are proposed and
evaluated: for each building, the percentages of internal and external
ruins area is a function of its vulnerability and the expected
earthquake Richter magnitude. Moreover, the external ruins formation
criterion is validated by comparing predicted and effective values of
ruins area depth in real cases. The model could be proposed as a tool
for evaluating probable pedestrians' choices in post-event scenarios, in
order to reduce the interferences between the built environment and the
evacuation process through interventions on buildings, urban fabric and
strategies for emergency management.
Tags
Agent-based model
Simulation
vulnerability
Buildings
exposure
Damage
Risk-ue project
Seismic hazard
Outdoor scenarios