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Saturday, April 4th, 2009 08:20 pm
Photos from a phone. No postprocessing, so-so quality.

A door in Glouster, MA.


Fall in an office park.


Inside MIT Stata Center (hosting EECS department and more). Beautiful meaningless architecture.

This is inside the building, yes. Beauty is in the eye etc, but meaning is how usable it is. Not very. I wanted to get down to the ground floor from the fourth by stairs. One led me only to the third floor. Another led me to a point in between the third and fourth floors where a small elevator deck was located. I got down by elevator, but what would I do in case of a fire?

A Lisp machine in MIT Museum. Should have used a real photo camera.



Bottom line: the phone camera sucks. Just 2M pixels, poor optics, and little control overall.

Update. More photos in the comments.
Sunday, April 5th, 2009 04:54 pm (UTC)
You can say "firemen", it is still allowed!

If you want to feel confident that you're fire-protected (ha!) inside the building, search for few things: 1)there should be sprinkler heads on the ceiling (sometimes they are recessed and not so easy to spot), at a minimum of 7'0" radius off center, 2) corridors and fire escape routs should be indicated with directional exit signs mounted either on the ceiling or wall above 7'6", the fire-rated (metal) doors into the fire-protected stairs should have panic hardware (to be swinging into the stair space by pushing on the panic bar; no levers), the conference and toilet rooms should be equipped with fire strobes (light signals) and fire alarm sirens (audio), the escape route inside enclosures should be indicated at 1'8" off the floor with luminescent yellow tape, that glows in the darkness and smoke.

There are other devices, but they are not so visible.

Hydrants I never care for...not my department!
Sunday, April 5th, 2009 05:20 pm (UTC)
Panic hardware is interesting. What is it used for, and how easy is it for an untrained person organism to use it?

As a computer programmer, "panic hardware" has a very different meaning for me! Actually, I would expect to see "hardware panic". Googling pairs it with "exit hardware", which, in turn, reminds me of software. :-)
Sunday, April 5th, 2009 05:30 pm (UTC)
Or, that's easy.
When you're inside the room, and there is a fire and smoke around you, you can't see where the lever or a knob on the door is. Also, when panicking, people tend to collect at the door, with little space for the door to open into the interior of the room. So the fire exit doors by code are swinging OUT of the affected room and INTO the safe enclosure. They also have bar hardware, which you don't have to see in the smoke - you just push at the bar, and it releases the door (or the panicky people behind you push YOU into the door, and it still opens). The bar is long enough (reaches across the door, which by code is a minimum of 34" wide), so in whatever spot you happen to push it, even if you';re close to hinge side, the door will open and let you into the fire-protected enclosure.
Sunday, April 5th, 2009 05:40 pm (UTC)
Yes, I remember those doors at fire exits. One of the first impressions from the US. (Another one was a different design of the toilet.)