| Literature DB >> 35410078 |
Abstract
Recently, global natural disasters have occurred frequently and caused serious damage. As an important urban space resource and public service facility, the reasonable planning and layout optimization of shelters is very important to reduce the disaster loss and improve the sustainable development of cities. Based on the review of location theory and models for shelter site selection, this study constructs a bi-level multi-objective location-allocation model, an accessibility, economy, and efficiency (AEE) model, based on sequential decision logic to maximize the economic sustainability and social utility. The model comprehensively considers factors such as the level of decision-making, the utilization efficiency, and capacity constraints of shelters. The gravity model is introduced to simulate the decision-making behavior of evacuees. A calculation example and its solution prove the high practicability and operability of the AEE model in an actual shelter site selection and construction investment, which can achieve the global optimization of evacuation time and the maximization of the use efficiency of the shelters under the financial constraints. It provides a scientific and effective decision-making method for the multi-objective location optimization problem of shelters.Entities:
Keywords: bi-level programming; disaster relief; location; optimization; shelter; site selection
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35410078 PMCID: PMC8998545 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19074401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Classical location model of public facilities from the perspective of shelter location.
| Model Type | Optimization Objectives | Characteristics | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P-median model (PMM) | Minimize total weighted distance from the evacuation demand sites to the shelters | Number of facilities known; | Efficiency first; | Neglect the influence of the shelter’s service capacity (e.g., level or scale) |
| P-center model (PCM) | Minimize the maximum distance from the evacuation demand sites to the shelters | Number of facilities known; | Fairness first; | High cost; Easy to cause waste of resources; |
| Set covering location model (SCLM) | Minimize the number of shelters under the premise of evacuation demand sites full covered | Find the minimum number of facilities and the most suitable location | Consider fairness and achieve full coverage; Minimum number of facilities | Neglect the constraint of facility scale and the distribution of existing facilities |
| Maximal covering location model (MCLM) | Maximize the service capacity of shelters within the cost constrain | Number of facilities known; Make facilities cover the largest number of evacuation demand sites | Maximize coverage; | Insufficient fairness; Unable to ensure full coverage of evacuation demand sites; |
Figure 1Development of shelter location research.
Literature review on the study of location and allocation of shelters.
| Time | Authors | Objective Hierarchy | Main Model | Objectives | Constraint | Solution Methods | Objects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1971 | Toregas et al. [ | Single | SCLM | Minimum number | Distance | Linear programming | Emergency facility |
| 1991 | Sherali et al. [ | Single | PMM | Minimum time | Capacity | Heuristic and an exact implicit enumeration algorithm | Hurricane shelter |
| 1997 | Adenso-Díaz & Rodríguez [ | Single | MCLM | Maximum coverage | Distance Number | Tabu search metaheuristic | Ambulance bases |
| 2001 | Zhou & Jian [ | Single | MCLM | Maximum coverage | Distance Number | Exact algorithm | Emergency shelter |
| 2004 | Huang et al. [ | Single | PMM | Minimum distance | Number | Genetic algorithm | Earthquake shelter |
| 2005 | Kongsomsaksakul et al. [ | Multi | Bi-level programming | Minimum cost | Capacity | Genetic algorithm | Flood shelter |
| 2005 | Chen, Z.Z., & You, J.X. [ | Multi | Hierarchical location | Minimum number | Distance Capacity | Exact algorithm | Ambulance center |
| 2006 | Li et al. [ | Multi | MCDM(AHP) | Minimum risk (include 7 factors) | Distance Capacity | Weighted Voronoi diagram | Fixed shelter |
| 2006 | Zhou et al. [ | Single | PMM + AHP | Minimum distance | Capacity | Approximation algorithm | Emergency shelter |
| 2007 | Li et al. [ | Multi | Bi-level programming | Minimum cost | Capacity | Iterative calculation | Emergency shelter |
| 2008 | Xu et al. [ | Multi | Hierarchical location | Minimum number | Distance | GIS-based decision support system | Emergency shelter |
| 2009 | Pan [ | Single | PMM | Minimum distance | Capacity | Genetic algorithm | Typhoon shelter |
| 2009 | Alcada-Almeida et al. [ | Multi | Multi-PMM | Minimum distance | Capacity Number | GIS-based decision support system | Fire shelter |
| 2009 | Saadatseresht et al. [ | Multi | Spatial MOP | Minimum risk | Distance Capacity | NSGA-II and GIS | Safe area |
| 2010 | Wei [ | Multi | MCLM | Maximum coverage | Distance Number | Exact algorithm | Emergency resources |
| 2010 | Chen et al. | Multi | Hierarchical model | Minimum distance | Capacity | General optimizer (LINGO) | Emergency shelter |
| 2010 | Zhou et al. [ | Multi | MCLM + PMM | Maximum coverage | Distance Nonoverlapping | General optimizer (LINGO) | Earthquake shelter |
| 2010 | Ng et al. [ | Multi | Bi-level programming | Minimum cost | Capacity | Simulated annealing algorithm | Emergency shelter |
| 2011 | Huang et al. [ | Single | SCLM + Network analysis | Maximum coverage | Capacity Distance | GIS-based decision support system | Earthquake shelter |
| 2011 | Wu, J. & Weng, W. [ | Multi | SCLM + Network analysis | Minimum cost | Distance | GIS-based decision support system | Emergency shelter |
| 2011 | Li et al. [ | Single | PMM | Minimum distance | Capacity Continuity | Shift insertion | Emergency shelter |
| 2012 | Coutinho-Rodrigues et al. [ | Multi | Spatial MOP | Minimum distance | Capacity Number | GIS-based decision support system | Fire shelter |
| 2012 | Chu et al. [ | Single | MCDM (AHP) | Maximum weight | Distance | Linear programming | Central refuge |
| 2012 | Liu [ | Multi | Hierarchical location | Minimum number | Distance Cost | GIS-based decision support system + Approximation algorithms | Earthquake shelter |
| 2013 | Ma [ | Multi | SCLM + MCLM | Maximum coverage | Capacity Number | Lagrange method | Emergency shelter |
| 2014 | Liu and Zhong [ | Multi | MCDM (AHP) | Maximum weight | Accessibility Capacity | Linear programming | Earthquake shelter |
| 2014 | Wang et al. [ | Multi | MCDM (TOPSIS) + SCLM | Minimum cost | Distance Number | Genetic algorithm particle swarm optimization | Earthquake shelter |
| 2014 | Chu [ | Multi | MCLM + PMM + MCDM (TOPSIS) | Minimum number | Capacity Distance Nonoverlapping | GIS-based decision support system + Particle swarm optimization | Earthquake shelter |
| 2014 | Li et al. [ | Multi | Spatial MOP | Minimum distance | Capacity Distance Nonoverlapping | GIS-based decision support system | Fixed shelter |
| 2015 | Kilci et al. [ | Single | PCM | Maximum weight | Capacity | GIS-based decision support system | Temporary shelter |
| 2015 | Yuan et al. [ | Single | SCLM | Maximum coverage | Capacity Number | Genetic algorithm | Fixed shelter |
| 2015 | Chu et al. [ | Multi | MCLM + PMM | Minimum number | Capacity Nonoverlapping | General optimizer (LINGO) | Fixed shelter |
| 2015 | Ma et al. [ | Multi | AHP + EVM + PCM | Maximum weight | Capacity Nonoverlapping | Particle swarm optimization | Fixed shelter |
| 2016 | Xu et al. [ | Multi | MCDM (AHP) | Maximum weight (Suitability, Feasibility, Sustainability) | - | Linear weighted sum | Flood shelter |
| 2017 | Chen [ | Multi | Bi-level Programming (MCLM + PMM) | Minimum number | Capacity Distance Nonoverlapping | General optimizer (LINGO) | Fixed shelter |
| 2017 | Boonmee et al. [ | Multi | Bi-level Programming | Minimum distance | Number Capacity | Gurobi optimizer | Flood shelter |
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the L-A model.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of the L-A model results.