1 / 16

Meeting NFPA 1710: Using GIS to Model Ideal Fire Station Allocation

2009 Ohio GIS Conference September 16-18, 2009 Crowne Plaza North Hotel Columbus, Ohio. 2009 Ohio GIS Conference September 16-18, 2009 Crowne Plaza North Hotel Columbus, Ohio. Meeting NFPA 1710: Using GIS to Model Ideal Fire Station Allocation. Jennifer Weisser GIS Coordinator

kiana
Télécharger la présentation

Meeting NFPA 1710: Using GIS to Model Ideal Fire Station Allocation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2009 Ohio GIS Conference September 16-18, 2009 Crowne Plaza North Hotel Columbus, Ohio 2009 Ohio GIS Conference September 16-18, 2009 Crowne Plaza North Hotel Columbus, Ohio Meeting NFPA 1710: Using GIS to Model Ideal Fire Station Allocation Jennifer Weisser GIS Coordinator Deerfield Township Randall W. Hanifen Adjunct Professor/Fire Officer University of Cincinnati/ Deerfield Township

  2. Project Beginnings • Fire station locations • Where to locate a new station? • Where to relocate a station?

  3. Interdepartmental Solutions • Need expertise from both GIS and Fire Departments to approach this project • Building relationships with other governmental entities to facilitate data exchange

  4. Fire Literature • 1710: 4.1.2.1 time objectives for call response • 1710: Appendix A  explanation of standard language • 90% of calls within 6 minute response • 1 minute dispatch time • 1 minute turnout time • 4 minute drive time • Fractile vs. average • 90% fractile is 5.5 minutes • Average is 3.5 minutes

  5. Fire Literature • Fire Protection Handbook 20th edition volume 2 section 12 chapter 13: GIS for fire station locations and response protocols (AKA ESRI white paper) • Incident analysis • Travel time modeling • Importance of response time  fire & EMS • Fire department total reflex time sequence  dispatch time, turnout time, response time, access time & setup time • Reducing response times • NFPA 1221  standard for installation maintenance & use of emergency services communication

  6. Measuring Distance Euclidean Network

  7. Data - Street Network • Clean geometry • One-way designations • Hierarchies • Speed limits • Segment distance • Conversions & calculations • Length_miles = Shape_length/5280 • Minutes = Length_miles*(60/speed_limit)

  8. Data - Turning Penalties

  9. Analysis Settings

  10. Service Area Generation

  11. Service Area Generation No Trim Trimmed

  12. Service Area Generation Detailed Polygons Generalized Polygons

  13. Statistical Verification of Model • Paired t-test • To compare historical call times (reality) to calculated response time (model) • Objective  keep null hypothesis

  14. Service Areas

  15. Model Applications • Calculate the existing service areas for the current configuration of fire stations • Alternative scenarios of fire station arrangements • Impact of preempting devices on service areas • Evaluation of emergency response zone borders & mutual aid with other jurisdictions • Location allocation • Assisting with the accreditation process

  16. Contact Info Jennifer Weisser 513-701-6967 jweis@deerfieldtwp.com ~~~ Randall W. Hanifen 513-266-6124 Randall.Hanifen@uc.edu

More Related