1) a formal evacuation plan is perhaps going too far
2) Most temporary huts or similar are highly flammable
4) such small buildings normally only have one exit
With the other points, I agree entirely.
WITHOUT the cookstove, the whole idea was very low risk, the owner does not smoke, and no flame based lighting was used in or near.
Had I been staying in such a hut I would have cooked outdoors, and then considered the arrangements acceptable.
I would also have kept basic supplies in the vehicle, and hidden a spare key to this.
The permanent house being built is being made as safe as posible from fire, recent events have concentrated the mind somwhat !
A formal evacuation plan needn't be typed up, notarized, signed in the blood of a virgin, and registered with the UN. I used the word formal to imply that there is something more than a ten second assessment going on. What is needed is a careful and deliberately thought through and realistic plan. It should be talked about and walked through, to the extent practical, with everyone in residence.
A friend failed his first walk-through when she discovered that he window she was planning to jump from was directly above a Spanish Bayonet plant. She had pictured it as being under the next window down. This would have been a jolting discovery finding this out in the middle of a fire. Even worse if she had blindly jumped.
Most small buildings only have one door. But windows and, with a bit of kicking, and a panel that is by design or default weakly attached, it is often practical to have a second exit without resort to either window or door. Figuring out ahead of time where to beat your way through, and possibly removing a few nails or screws, makes it a much more viable alternative.
No need to get obsessive about it but if you spend enough time to sleep in a building spending a couple minutes thinking through the options could save the day when the time comes. It isn't just fire. A tree-falls and tornadoes have been known to trap people. In this day and age of industrial accidents and terrorism having options, knowing where the back door is, makes sense.
When I stay at a hotel I spend a few minutes locating the exits, fire extinguishers. If the path isn't dead simple I have been known to count steps to exits. In a smoke filled hall distances get confused. More than once I've done the same thing in an airliner counting rows of seats.
Also, a fire extinguisher needn't be a high-dollar commercial unit rated and certified. A simple bucket of sand and/or a heavy wool blanket can temporarily smother a fire. Toss it over top of the burning area and it keeps the flames at bay long enough to make an orderly withdrawal. An old garage sale blanket and an old galvanized two gallon bucket with liberated builder's sand can save the day.
A bit after the fact, it might help someone some day, is to remember that even simple wooden structures can be inexpensively whitewashed. This dresses up the exterior and lightens the interior. It also increases the fire resistance of wood. Once the wood catches whitewash won't stop a fire but it can cause the wood to catch and spread fire more slowly. Which buys you time. I've seen a whitewashed piece of wood take most of a minute to catch when thrown into a roaring fire.
Whitewash can be as simple as slaked lime in water, have chalk added to make it whiter, or bought as a commercial product.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitewash