The Pedestrian Accessibility and Movement Environment Laboratory (PAMELA) was a research facility located in Upper Holloway, part of the University College London in the United Kingdom.
It was designed to study human interactions in controlled conditions by replicating real-world environments such as urban streets and public parks. The laboratory had an 80-square-metre (860 sq ft) artificial pavement platform which was used to simulate everyday scenarios, from different types of pedestrians to varying pavement conditions.[1] Its experiments were intended to create safer streets and more user-friendly public spaces.[2]
PAMELA in Upper Holloway was replaced by PEARL (Person-Environment-Activity Research Laboratory) in the London East Business and Technical Park, Dagenham.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Scientists walk on tech pavement
- ^ "First custom-designed pedestrian accessibility lab launched".
- ^ "PEARL Background Information Document" (PDF). UCL. Retrieved 23 May 2024.
External links
edit- "PAMELA Homepage".
- Computer-controlled lab helps study environment impacts on disabled at the Wayback Machine (archived 24 February 2007)
- PAMELA Project Overview at the Wayback Machine (archived 5 February 2012)