Sports facility managers face a lethal combination of physical and psychosocial risks: constant movement leading to falls, stress from managing large-scale events, eye strain from screens, and the latent threat of aggression from users. This professional profile, often overlooked in prevention plans, requires a deep technical analysis that goes beyond traditional static evaluations.
Digital twins and critical route mapping 🏟️
3D technology allows creating digital twins of facilities to simulate the manager's supervision routes. By modeling pedestrian flows and integrating environmental noise data, it is possible to identify blind spots where the risk of aggression increases or where forced postures become chronic. These predictive models help redesign routes, locate ergonomic rest points, and establish safe zones, aligning with occupational prevention regulations that require proactive hazard identification in vulnerable groups.
Towards comprehensive protection with immersive data 🛡️
Simulating stress scenarios, such as managing a peak hour or a conflict with a user, allows training the manager in a controlled virtual environment. By visualizing in 3D the triggers of anxiety or the areas of greatest noise exposure, specific protection protocols can be designed to address both physical and psychosocial risks. This methodology transforms passive prevention into an active safeguarding tool for a group that upholds everyone's safety.
How can 3D simulation anticipate chronic fatigue and psychosocial risks for a sports manager who moves between different facilities, to protect their mental health before a breakdown occurs?
(PS: protecting the military is like protecting your Blender file: back it up or cry later) 😉