The Constantly Changing Landscape of Risk in Campus Environments
Change is inevitable, here’s how to assess risk in the face of it
- By April Musser, PE, CFPS, MBA
- April 01, 2019
One of the most pervasive enemies of
risk mitigation protocols and features
is change. One of the most
pervasive features of any facility,
but especially campus environments
such as universities and colleges, is
constant change. For this reason, risk control
is not a “once and done” effort concluded
upon the opening and occupancy of a newly
constructed or remodeled facility. In fact,
changes to the landscape of risk happen
often, even in the absence of such obvious
modifications. Some changes happen so
slowly and innocuously, such as changing
research goals that result in different equipment
or procedures, that only the most vigilant
process would identify the resulting
impact on facility risk. As a result, risk
assessment studies, risk mitigation features,
and emergency response preplanning require
periodic review and update.
Campus environments for colleges and
universities present a unique challenge. Innovation
and growth are necessary in these
environments, but one must not overlook the
increased risk these changes introduce. It
seems many such campuses are constantly in
a state of flux, with construction projects
ranging from new construction, to renovations,
to additions. Legacy facilities may be readapted for different uses with vastly different
risk profiles. Occupants of campus environments
also tend to be transient, and populations
may vary drastically from day to day,
or even hour by hour. Special events can also
induce significant population increases,
many of whom may be completely unfamiliar
with the facility and their expected response
during emergency procedures.
Construction, Renovation, and Additions
Design phase services for new construction,
renovations, and additions will include risk
mitigation features such as sprinkler protection,
fire alarm, mass notification, and possibly
even smoke control or specialized
alarm and suppression requirements. Likewise,
passive risk mitigation is designed into
these facilities as mandated by the applicable
codes and insurance providers in features
such as fire rated construction, compartmentation,
and egress features.
However, consider a facility renovation
that requires a portion of the building to
remain open and operational during construction.
To separate occupants from the
hazards of a construction zone, previously
available egress pathways may be blocked off
and building features, such as fire suppression
and alarm, may be temporarily disabled. In a
campus environment, even completely new
construction could affect egress routes from
adjacent buildings or limit access to a public
way due to construction zones, staging areas,
and construction traffic. Existing exit signs
may lead occupants toward exits that are inaccessible
due to construction activities.
In order to ensure that new construction
and renovation projects do not negatively
affect egress features or other safety features,
construction phasing exercises must include
egress studies, emergency responder access
planning, and safety system impairment
plans. It is not enough to verify that remaining
egress routes are adequate for the expected
occupant loads, or that fire department
access is maintained. Instead, careful and
detailed assessment is necessary to address
all risk-mitigation considerations such as
emergency system impairment, existing exit
sign locations, changes in egress routes,
access to public ways, and hazards introduced
by construction.
For example, hot works such as welding
could introduce unacceptable risk if conducted
in an area near floor refinishing or
involving flammable liquids. In addition,
pre-incident planning with the local emergency
responder organizations is necessary
to address plans for dealing with temporary
impairments including fire hydrants that are
out of service, or access to building fire
department connections due to construction
staging, and re-routed building egress that
could hamper emergency responder access.
Changes in Use
Less obvious than new construction is the
risk of changing use over time. Research
laboratories are just one example. As technology
and new research initiatives move
forward, the equipment, tools, processes,
materials, chemicals, and even occupants
may change. The laboratory that may have
been adequately designed for yesterday’s
research may have woefully inadequate protection
as these considerations change over
the life of the building. New research projects
may require the use of more hazardous
chemicals or materials. Ventilation requirements
may change if different chemicals are
required. Yesterday’s laboratory full of
microscopes might house industrial ovens
tomorrow, depending on research needs.
Retrofitting new research goals into legacy
laboratory space could require researchers to
adopt a “make due” attitude when things
such as counter space or storage access are
not designed to support the current research
efforts. This can lead people to inadvertently
render risk mitigation features less effective
or even useless.
For example, adding a table to the room to
hold equipment too large for the available
work benches could result in secondary
egress doors becoming blocked in order to
make room for a table to hold necessary
equipment. Lack of storage space may result
in researchers storing different chemicals
together. Convenience may inspire users to
store larger quantities of chemicals in the
laboratory storage cabinets, instead of having
to constantly retrieve them from hazardous
storage areas. Finally, as researchers leave and
new ones take over the space, they may be
less knowledgeable about the active and passive
risk mitigation features of the space,
making them more prone to unknowingly
subverting their effectiveness through their
use of different procedures and methods.
Even a simple advance in research that
requires the use of different materials or
chemicals of a higher hazard than were
anticipated during facility initial design and
construction could render a once-appropriate
fire sprinkler system ineffective. Products
with higher heat release rates or
increased combustible loads could potentially
overwhelm a sprinkler system
designed for lower hazards.
These are just a few examples of how facility
change can impact risk mitigation, and
they illustrate why periodic audits are vital to
ensuring the facility complies with both code
and the facility risk strategy. Because people
tend to be one of the most unpredictable features
of change, the risk assessment strategy should include educational efforts for users
to help curb actions that could increase risk.
Security Threats
In today’s environment, the risk associated
with outside threats such as terrorism, active
shooters, and even simple negligence cannot
be overlooked. These threats often introduce
new security measures that may not have
existing during building design. Security
measures taken without consideration of the
impact on fire protection and life safety can
be detrimental to facility and occupant safety
in a fire or other emergency. For example, a
secure door fitted with an electronic lock and
card reader access may unlock upon a fire
alarm to allow free egress. However, if the
card reader is later disabled in favor of a
keyed lock, the free egress feature initially
designed into the system will no longer operate
as designed. The resulting impact on
emergency egress could be detrimental.
Likewise, traffic bollards installed to prevent
vehicle traffic from accessing areas
around a facility could affect fire department
access to the facility. Even removable bollards
can slow down fire department response
times. The addition of screening equipment
such as metal detectors or turnstiles could
decrease exit access or increase required
egress time. Video monitoring equipment
installed to increase safety and security may
have resulted in penetrations for conductors
through fire rated enclosures, thus impacting
passive fire protection features. Even something
as simple as hanging blinds for security
on an interior window that is protected with
window sprinklers to achieve required fire
ratings can prevent water from reaching the
glass and render the window sprinkler useless,
thus negating the required fire rating and
compartmentation goals.
While many other examples exist, the
important point is that these concerns can
only be addressed if they are known. The
only way to know is through periodic
audits, security and use assessments, and
constant updates to emergency protocols
and procedures.
The People Factor
Finally, populations in campus environments
can drastically vary from day to day.
Events such as graduations, concerts, and
sporting events can introduce occupant load
surges. When these events are held in facilities
that are designed for such high occupant
events, the risk that the occupant load
increases will impact egress is minimal.
However, facilities may host smaller events
that were not designed for assembly use.
Areas such as building atriums, vacant lecture
halls or classrooms, or libraries may be
used to host assemblies such as career fairs
and networking events, for example. In a
building not designed for assembly purposes,
these gatherings could overload the available
egress and the transient nature of
attendees could compound the problem by
filling the facility with those unfamiliar with
alternative egress routes.
Traffic associated with campus events may
create a campus-wide traffic issue. Even
small concentrations of increased traffic in
specific areas may impact fire department
access. The need for overflow parking can
also contribute to temporary situations
where parking could limit building access for
emergency responders.
Best Practices
Due to of the constantly changing landscape
of risk on a college or university campus, risk
assessment and evaluation must be an ongoing
process. Periodic audits and reviews of
facility use, hazards, and security concerns
are vital to ensure that the progress and
change that is so prevalent in campus environments
maintain the expected level of protection
and risk mitigation.
These assessments must look beyond just
fire protection systems such as sprinkler
protection and fire alarm systems to include
an in-depth review of changes in hazards
and life safety considerations, with due consideration
of other systems that may impact
these features. Construction and renovation
phasing must include a complete risk assessment
and egress review to ensure occupant
protection and egress access through all
phases of construction. Finally, these ongoing
efforts must include preplanning with
emergency responders.
Change and innovation is inevitable.
However, it requires a vigilant eye to ensure
that these continuous and sometimes
unnoticeably slow changes do not increase
risk to unacceptable levels, or decrease the
level of protection for occupants and facility
assets.
This article originally appeared in the March/April 2019 issue of Campus Security Today.