Effective width drives usable capacity
Throughput is governed by effective width, not architectural clear width. The tool subtracts edge clearances for railing shy-distance, then removes obstruction width. A utilization factor reduces width to reflect uneven use near doors, turns, or pinch points. Increasing effective width usually improves capacity almost linearly and lowers density for the same demand.
Peak hour factor converts hourly totals into design flow
Arrivals are rarely uniform. A peak hour factor (PHF) below 1.00 indicates a sharper within-hour surge. The calculator divides hourly demand by PHF to estimate a peak-adjusted design flow, then uses it for density and V/C. Lower PHF values should be used when crowds arrive in waves from transit platforms, event releases, or signal timing.
Two-way balance reduces performance near 50/50
Opposing streams create passing conflicts and lateral friction. The directional split input applies a conservative conflict factor, with the greatest reduction at balanced two-way flow and minimal reduction near one-way conditions. If operations allow, temporary one-way management can improve stability and user comfort during peak periods.
Surface and grade modify walking efficiency
Surface condition and grade influence confidence and pace. Wet or slippery finishes reduce specific capacity, and uphill grades reduce performance further. If sustained grades exceed 5%, consider landings, better traction, and clear drainage to protect safety while preserving movement.
Use density-based LOS to communicate user experience
LOS is assigned from density bands. LOS A–C supports comfortable passing, while LOS E–F indicates constrained movement where queues and stop-and-go behavior may appear. Combine LOS with V/C: poor LOS plus high V/C is a strong trigger for widening, access control, or schedule-based demand management.
| Scenario | Effective width (m) | Demand (ped/h) | PHF | Density (ped/m²) | LOS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commuter peak | 3.06 | 1800 | 0.90 | 0.42 | B |
| Event surge | 2.21 | 2600 | 0.80 | 1.33 | E |