Friday 8 August 08 - 00:20
 

News

EXODUS Wins Prestigious Award

EXODUS evacuation simulation software developed by the University of Greenwich (UK) Fire Safety Engineering Group has been awarded a prestigious Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education at a special ceremony at Buckingham Palace. The Queen presented a gold medal and an illuminated prize certificate to the University's Vice Chancellor, Professor Rick Trainor, and Professor Ed Galea, Director of the Fire Safety Engineering Group.
The Falcon ROV with powered cleaning brush attached increases project safety in ALWC surveys.
The Falcon ROV with powered cleaning brush attached increases project safety in ALWC surveys.

EXODUS uses complex software models to predict human behaviour during fires in confined spaces. It is more realistic than conventional human evacuation trials and free of the dangers and high cost. It enables designers to test the safety of ships, aircraft and buildings before they are built, helping to avoid mistakes which could cost both lives and large amounts of money.

In many countries EXODUS is now the standard evacuation analysis tool. It has been used on projects in 22 countries including London's Millennium Dome, Sydney's Olympic Stadium, and the Airbus 380 aircraft.

MaritimeEXODUS, developed for use by ship designers, won the 2001 Communications & IT in Shipping Award for 'Innovation in IT for Ship Operations'. LLoyds Register delivers its ship evacuation guidance service using MaritimeEXODUS. The software enables users to run passenger evacuation simulations on a 3D ship model, allowing them to identify potential bottlenecks early in the design process. The programme enables Lloyds Register to fulfil the requirement for the evaluation of escape routes on board ro-ro passenger vessels as specified under Regulation II-2/28-1.3 of SOLAS. The programme is equally applicable to other types of passenger vessels.

MaritimeEXODUS software works in tandem with fire and smoke spread models, enabling users to estimate the exposure of passengers and crew to smoke, heat, and narcotic and irritant gases, as well as the impact of this exposure on their ability to evacuate safely. The simulation also takes different types of passengers into account, modelling the behaviour expected of people of differing ages, genders and levels of disability among other characteristics.

MJ Information No: 18010

Images for this article - click to enlarge

The Falcon ROV with powered cleaning brush attached increases project safety in ALWC surveys.

All images copyright © Mercator Media 2008

Seawork International 2009 - 23rd to 25th June 2009