In areas where horizontal evacuation to higher ground is impossible, vertical evacuation to higher areas of a structure may be a way to shelter individuals from the surge of water, several meters high, that can follow an earthquake in coastal areas.[2][3]
Signage in Thailand for horizontal evacuation from tsunami
An alternative to vertical evacuation is horizontal evacuation, for instance a hurricane evacuation route. Critics of vertical evacuation planning have charged it with justifying even greater human density in areas prone to disaster, and prefer low density growth with horizontal evacuation planning.[9]
"Vertical evacuation and other strategies"(PDF), Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquakes: A Magnitude 9..0 Earthquake Scenario (2013 update ed.), Cascadia Region Earthquake Workgroup (CREW), 2013, p. 22
Designing for Tsunamis, National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program (NOAA, FEMA, USGS, Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington State), March 2001
Penuel, K. Bradley; Statler, Matt, eds. (2010), "Evacuation, types of", Encyclopedia of Disaster Relief, SAGE Publications, ISBN9781452266398, The term vertical evacuation refers to a social process where agents relocate from one threatened area to an upper area or areas of the same physical structure.
Further reading
Ruch, Carlton E., ed. (1991), The Feasibility of Vertical Evacuation: Behavioral, Legal, Political, and Structural Considerations, Volume 52 of Program on environment and behavior, Institute of Behavirol Science, University of Colorado, ISBN9781877943058