Stairway Handrails Requirements in the ADA Standards (§504) Protruding Objects The ADA Standards address hazards posed by protruding objects, such as standpipe valves, along circulation...
Search Results "Circulation Path"
Commonly Searched Documents
-
Stairway Handrails Requirements in the ADA Standards (§504)
-
11B-405.8 Handrails
[2010 ADAS] EXCEPTION: Within employee work areas, handrails shall not be required where ramps that are part of common use circulation paths are designed to permit the installation...
-
11B-405.8 Handrails
[2010 ADAS] EXCEPTION: Within employee work areas, handrails shall not be required where ramps that are part of common use circulation paths are designed to permit the installation of...
-
11B-405.8 Handrails
[2010 ADA Standards] EXCEPTION: Within employee work areas, handrails shall not be required where ramps that are part of common use circulation paths are designed to permit the installation...
-
11B-216.6 Entrances
path...
-
Employee Work Areas [§203.9]
, and exit the work area (§203.9) accessible means of egress (§207.1) wiring for visible alarms in areas served by audible alarms (§215.3) accessible common use circulation...
-
11B-216.6 Entrances
path...
-
11B-204.1 General
Protruding objects on circulation paths shall comply with Section 11B-307....
-
11B-204.1 General
Protruding objects on circulation paths shall comply with Section 11B-307. Exceptions: 1....
-
§ 38.77 Interior circulation, handrails and stanchions
[See subsections ...]
-
§ 38.57 Interior circulation, handrails and stanchions
[See subsections ...]
-
Feature 2 - Routes to the Building Entrance
Feature 2 - Routes to the Building Entrance Accessible routes connect accessible onsite features (e.g., bus stop, parking) to the building entrance. There must be at least...
-
11B-216.6 Entrances
path...
-
Shared Use Paths
The preamble to the proposed rule indicated that the proposed scoping and technical requirements for trails would apply to shared use paths....
-
Detectable Warning Surfaces at Shared Use Path Intersections
Detectable Warning Surfaces at Shared Use Path Intersections Detectable warning surfaces consist of small truncated domes that are integral to a walking surface and that are detectable...
-
§ 36.403(h)(1)
(1) The obligation to provide an accessible path of travel may not be evaded by performing a series of small alterations to the area served by a single path of travel if those alterations...
-
Section 35.151(b) Alterations
of travel for covered entities, although the 1991 Standards describe standards for path of travel during alterations to a primary function....
-
§ 36.403(e)(2)
(2) An accessible path of travel may consist of walks and sidewalks, curb ramps and other interior or exterior pedestrian ramps; clear floor paths through lobbies, corridors, rooms, and...
-
§ 37.43(d)
(d) As used in this section, a “path of travel” includes a continuous, unobstructed way of pedestrian passage by means of which the altered area may be approached, entered, and exited, and...
-
11B-202.3 Alterations
Where existing elements or spaces are altered, each altered element or space shall comply with the applicable requirements of Division 2, including Section 11B-202.4 _|Alterations; Path...
-
2. Shared Use Paths
Shared use paths, unlike most sidewalks, are physically separated from streets by an open space or barrier....
-
Employee Work Areas—Section 203.9 of the 2010 Standards, and Similar Sections
The 2010 Standards require a more limited level of access within employee work areas in ADA-covered facilities than UFAS, which requires employee work areas to be fully accessible....
-
j) Safety Hazards Policy
Though Kirola complained of steep paths at Alamo Square Park, the probative value of such testimony is undermined by the lack of any objective data (such as actual measurements of those...