The Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex runs from downtown Dallas towers to the Telecom Corridor's tech and finance campuses in Richardson and an enormous belt of logistics, warehouse, and distribution facilities. The office towers need stairwell planning, while the distribution centers need routes that hold up over long travel distances across open floor.
Texas has no state OSHA plan, so Dallas employers follow federal OSHA directly, including the 29 CFR 1910.38 Emergency Action Plan rule, with Dallas Fire-Rescue enforcing local fire codes. The biggest local wrinkle is that Dallas sits in Tornado Alley, where the right response is often shelter-in-place rather than evacuation.
Severe storms, hail, and tornadoes mean a plan has to cover two different responses: getting out for fire, and moving to a hardened interior space for a tornado. OSHAMap converts your floor plan into a posting-ready map that marks exits, routes, assembly points, and best-available shelter areas, covering a downtown office or a DFW distribution center in minutes.