From the Board’s website: “Sidewalks, street crossings, and other elements in the public right-of-way can pose challenges to accessibility....
Search Results "Element-by-Element"
Commonly Searched Documents
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1. Public Rights-of-Way
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Mounting Height and Location
Such signs are to be mounted so that the tactile elements (raised characters and braille) are between 48 to 60 inches high, measured to the baseline of characters. Comment....
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F234.1 General
Where there are appropriate technical provisions, they must be applied to the elements that are covered by the scoping provisions. Advisory F234.1 General Exception....
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1. Public Rights-of-Way
From the Board’s website: “Sidewalks, street crossings, and other elements in the public right-of-way can pose challenges to accessibility....
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234.1 General
Where there are appropriate technical provisions, they must be applied to the elements that are covered by the scoping provisions. Advisory 234.1 General Exception....
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604.9 Water Closets and Toilet Compartments for Children's Use
The specifications of one age group should be applied consistently in the installation of a water closet and related elements....
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206.2.8 Employee Work Areas
Department of Justice ADA regulations provide additional guidance regarding the relationship between these requirements and elements that are not part of the built environment....
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Narrative description. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
owners and operators exhibit movies with narrative descriptions, which enable individuals who are blind or have low vision to enjoy movies by providing a spoken interpretation of key visual elements...
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604.9 Water Closets and Toilet Compartments for Children’s Use
The specifications of one age group should be applied consistently in the installation of a water closet and related elements. ...
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Alterations to prison cells.
about the most effective means to ensure that existing correctional facilities are made accessible to prisoners with disabilities and presented three options: (1) Require all altered elements...
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New Construction
All areas must comply unless specifically exempted in the Standards or where scoping limits the number of multiple elements required to be accessible....
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1. Typical Issues for Individuals Who Use Wheelchairs, Scooters, or Other Mobility Devices
An accessible route is at least 36 inches wide and may narrow briefly to 32 inches wide where the route passes through doors or next to furniture and building elements....
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206.2.8 Employee Work Areas
The Department of Justice ADA regulations provide additional guidance regarding the relationship between these requirements and elements that are not part of the built environment....
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234.1 General
Where there are appropriate technical provisions, they must be applied to the elements that are covered by the scoping provisions. Advisory 234.1 General Exception....
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1. Public Rights-of-Way
From the Board’s website: “Sidewalks, street crossings, and other elements in the public right-of-way can pose challenges to accessibility....
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11B-604.9 Water closets and toilet compartments for children's use
The specifications of one age group should be applied consistently in the installation of a water closet and related elements. ...
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Part 1. Typical Issues for Voters Who Use Wheelchairs, Scooters, or Other Mobility Devices
An accessible route is at least 36 inches wide and may narrow briefly to 32 inches wide where the route passes through doors or next to furniture and building elements....
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Protruding Objects and Trails
Accessibility guidelines do not consider natural elements such as tree branches and rock formations to be protruding objects....
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F247.1 General
A pedestrian route developed primarily to connect elements, spaces, and facilities within a site is not a trail....
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II. Research Methodology
Prior to participating in this survey, prospective participants were advised to spend some time gathering information pertaining to research elements (trail’s geographic information, surface...
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Applicability
In theory, a Building Code remains applicable throughout the life and operation of a building or other element of the built environment -- see also subsequent discussions about changes and...
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1. Public Rights-of-Way
From the Board’s website: “Sidewalks, street crossings, and other elements in the public right-of-way can pose challenges to accessibility....
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1. Public Rights-of-Way
From the Board’s website: “Sidewalks, street crossings, and other elements in the public right-of-way can pose challenges to accessibility....
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APPENDIX A
team and site coordinator will identify the nine critical areas for data collection: 1) entry to playground where playground surface starts; 2) accessible route connecting accessible play elements...