Performance of Campus Parking Garages in Preventing Crime
Publication: Journal of Performance of Constructed Facilities
Volume 18, Issue 1
Abstract
The Ohio State University (OSU) initiated this study in response to campus parking garage crime that persisted at an unacceptably high level in spite of campus-wide efforts to reduce crime. The writers combined crime statistics gathered by the OSU Police Department with results of an on-site survey to model parking using Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) principles. The goal of the study was a group of CPTED-based design changes intended to create an environment that would deter parking garage crime. The analysis included factors such as lighting, visibility, garage color, location of entrances and exits, and design of elevators and stairways. The evaluation showed that lighting was the most significant factors in users’ perception of parking garage safety. As a result of this study, OSU implemented the recommended CPTED improvements. In the 2 years following the implementation of CPTED improvements, the average annual incidence of crime in the parking garage where the CPTED improvements had been made fell by more than half of the average annual incidence of crime in that same garage for the four years before the improvements were made.
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References
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Copyright
Copyright © 2004 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Received: Jun 24, 2002
Accepted: Aug 23, 2002
Published online: Jan 16, 2004
Published in print: Feb 2004
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