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Safer Schools and Hospitals

 

Modelling Surveillance and Movement

Navigation: Overview Step 1: Obtaining Data Step 2: Walking the Site Step 3: Modelling Surveillance Step 5: Developing a Strategy Step 6: Implementation Step 4: Assessing Risk Navigation: Step 3

This section helps you identify how well the building controls movement and supports or hinders natural surveillance.

Both movement and surveillance are key to crime prevention through environmental design principals. Objectively understanding which areas within the building are more secluded from view and as a result might be more vulnerable, can help ensure improvement strategies are targeted to the locations of greatest need.

Surveillance

Why is understanding surveillance important?

Surveillance is an important factor when understanding the locations of crimes and incidents, and identifying risk:

  • The risk and fear of crime can increase as the level of surveillance decreases;

  • People are more likely to witness crimes, incidents or disturbances if the location is well populated or overlooked.

The two main types of surveillance are 'Natural Surveillance' and 'Artificial Surveillance'.

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How will mapping surveillance help me?

Mapping surveillance will help you answer three key questions concerning your site:

  1. Which locations have high levels of natural surveillance by staff?
  2. Which locations have high levels of natural surveillance by members of the public?
  3. Which locations can be overseen using CCTV? Which locations have neither CCTV nor natural surveillance?

This will highlight areas which are secluded from view. It can then be compared to the locations where crime and incidents have taken place (identified in the crime mapping), and the locations of vandalism and antisocial behaviour (identified in the site survey).

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Movement and wayfinding

The way that a building or site controls movement is both governed by the layout of the buildings or site as well as the use of signs and access control measures.

This section outlines a way in which you can model how well the design of your site or building supports natural wayfinding and where routes are unclear. This is important for crime prevention as:

It reduces stress to visitors trying to find their way around

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It can help control access and movement

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Modelling movement and wayfinding also helps to identify which routes are likely to be heavily used. This information can then be overlaid with the surveillance data to see if there are key areas which are not under observation. It also helps inform decisions on signage.

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Creating your surveillance and movement maps

Mapping surveillance and movement by hand is a cheap and quick method to illustrate the issues outlined above: which areas are observed and which are secluded; and whether they coincide with key usage areas.

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Mapping of surveillance and movement by hand

There are six stages to modelling surveillance and movement. We have used an example from Case Study C, a hospital A&E department.

Stage 1: Identify surveillance points

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Stage 2: Mark view lines

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Stage 3: Shade in the region surveyed

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Stage 4: Complete regions surveyed

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Stage 5: Identify movement and access points

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Stage 6: Add other issues

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Computer modelling of movement and surveillance

If you have a very complex plan then it can be difficult to identify which routes a person will be likely to take from the main entrance to the building or to clearly see which areas are more easily observed and which are secluded. One way in which this can be tackled is to use a technique called visibility graph analysis (VGA).

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Interpreting the data

Once you have followed each of the steps to map both natural surveillance and artificial surveillance, the next stage is to evaluate the impact upon the control of movement inside your building. Considering this next to the mapping of crimes and incidents that have occurred in the past, this will help identify which locations are vulnerable for crime in the future.

Example: Case Study C

View crime map interpretation

Case Study C with mapping interpretations (click to enlarge).

In the plan of the hospital, five key issues have been identified which are as follows:

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The key aspects to look for when interpreting your plan are:

  • Movement routes – how well are heavily used routes overseen? Would you or others be able to distinguish a legitimate user from an illegitimate user?

  • The access routes into your building – are these controlled through any access control measures? Are they overseen by staff?

  • Where do your crimes occur? Are there any patterns between crime types and the location? For example, crimes such as pick pocketing occur in areas of heavy use, however, bullying, graffiti and property damage normally occur in areas that are less well overlooked.

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Checklist

Have you:

  • Created a map that shows natural surveillance and CCTV coverage of the building interior?

  • Created a map that shows natural surveillance and CCTV coverage of the building grounds?

  • Identified on the maps locations of access routes and movement routes?

  • Compared the surveillance locations to the locations of crimes – do any patterns emerge?

Download a document containing all the checklists from this toolkit (PDF 310kB)

Click here for a text-only version of the checklist

Achievements from this step

The output of this stage is a map (or series of maps) showing surveillance, movement and wayfinding on your site. This will help you to develop a spatial understanding of your site by identifying secluded areas which might be potentially problematic.

Navigation: Overview

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Last update:  15 April 2005