CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
October 1, 2009: Centers for Disease Control
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Traffic related issues;
Fire Related Issues;
Fire vs. Vehicle Injuries and Fatalities
2,596.00
3,032,672.00
16,400.0043,560.00
0.00
500,000.00
1,000,000.00
1,500,000.00
2,000,000.00
2,500,000.00
3,000,000.00
3,500,000.00
Fatalities Injuries
Inc
ide
nts
pe
r Y
ea
r
Fire
Vehicle
10 14 18 22 26 30 34 380.01.02.03.04.05.06.07.0
AIS Severity (6=fatal)
10 14 18 22 26 30 34 38
Impact Speed (mph)
Impact Speed vs. Pedestrian Injury (impact only)
10 14 18 22 26 30 34 380.01.02.03.04.05.06.07.0
AIS Severity (6=fatal)
10 14 18 22 26 30 34 38
Impact Speed (mph)
Impact Speed vs. Pedestrian Injury (impact only)
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
What is the Initiative?
• Making less than 20 foot
clear legal through code
changes
• Building an Alliance with
Emergency Responders
• Making the Public Health
Case for Narrower
Connected Street
Networks
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
2.4 7.6(per 500’ block)
Narrower streets are safer streets, butFire operations must be accommodated
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Dissected and DisconnectedDissected and Disconnected
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Connected and IntegratedConnected and Integrated
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Comparing Street Connectivity
An Existing Chico
Subdivision
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Comparing Street Connectivity
Proposed Plan
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Long, slow routes Short, direct routes
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Households per Fire Station
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Annualized Per-Capita Life Cycle Costs(based on 2-apparatus station)
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Average Citywide Response Time and Connectivity Ratio
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Conclusions
• Degree of connectivity directly affects Fire Station service area size
– Higher connectivity ratios = larger service areas
• Larger service area distributes fixed costs over more households
• Fire station costs are fixed
• Good connectivity = Financial efficiency
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Response time = average speed * response
distance
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Response time = average speed * response distance
To improve response times
Option 1: Increase speeds
Option 2: Reduce response distances• Keep homes closer to existing firehouses• Design shorter routes from firehouse to homes
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Fire vs. Vehicle Injuries and Fatalities
2,596.00
3,032,672.00
16,400.0043,560.00
0.00
500,000.00
1,000,000.00
1,500,000.00
2,000,000.00
2,500,000.00
3,000,000.00
3,500,000.00
Fatalities Injuries
Inc
ide
nts
pe
r Y
ea
r
Fire
Vehicle
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
2.4 7.6(per 500’ block)
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
“Broad is the road that leads to destruction
…narrow is the road that leads to life.”
-Jesus
(Matthew 7:13-14)
New International Version
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Save the Date
CNU Portland Transportation Summit
Register Now at www.cnu.org/transportation2009
CNU Emergency Response & Street Design Initiative
Next Steps: CNU & CDC
• Data
• Resources
• Other Emergency Responder Contacts
Heather Smith
312-551-7300
Top Related