Parents dealing with a young child's needs are not always mindful of the needs of others, and poorly located baby changing tables that are left in the deployed position can limit door...
Search Results "In-Swinging Door"
Commonly Searched Documents
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11B-226.4 Baby changing tables
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Alterations and Additions
Alterations can be as limited as the replacement of a fixture or element, such as a lavatory, toilet, or piece of door hardware....
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CCDA Accessibility Checklist for Building Inspectors, 2015 Edition
finish product thicknesses such as flooring materials or wall coverings must be considered when reviewing critical accessibility features, including but not to, widths of halls, corridors, door...
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233.1 General
For example: Section 206.5.4 requires all doors and doorways providing user passage in residential dwelling units providing mobility features to comply with Section 404; Section 206.7.6...
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Checklist for Inclusive Emergency Safety Briefings for Attendees
Avoid directions that are not inclusive, such as: look for the closest exit, exit through the green door in the back of...
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§1191.1(b)
requirement for General Services Administration owned buildings and lease construction with government option to purchase buildings to provide at least one automatic or power-assisted door...
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Selection of Playgrounds
Cooke and Campbell (2004) summarized the advantage to the snowball sampling technique as an efficient way to locate hard-to-reach groups, especially when using a named contact to open doors...
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Section 36.305 Alternatives to Barrier Removal (Section-By-Section Analysis and Response to Comments)
Similarly, if it is not readily achievable to ramp a long flight of stairs leading to the front door of a restaurant or a pharmacy, the restaurant or the pharmacy must take alternative measures...
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Section 37.7 Standards for Accessible Vehicles
An example of what could be an equivalent facilitation would concern rail cars which would leave too wide a horizontal gap between the door and the platform....
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1134A.8 Lavatories, vanities, mirrors and towel fixtures
Doors to the cabinet beneath the lavatory shall be removable or openable to provide the required unobstructed knee and toe space....
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Identification of accessible features in hotels and guest rooms. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
For example, if the door to the ‘‘accessible'' room or bathroom is narrower than required, this information should be included (e.g., door to guest room measures 30 inches clear)....
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§ 382.41 Stowage of personal equipment
in the passenger cabin as carry-on baggage, carriers shall provide for the checking and timely return of passengers’ wheelchairs and other assistive devices as close as possible to the door...
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4. Grievance Procedure
The City also trained its staff to go door-to-door in the poorest neighborhoods to speak with community members about their disability access needs. RT 1634:15-17. 29....
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b) Library Program
Library staff members have various tools, such as door pressure monitors, to conduct these daily inspections. RT 2235:22- 2237:13, 2252:10-2253:21; DTX A45....
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Section 37.167 Other Service Requirements
., construction, an accident, a landslide) made the stop unsafe for anyone to use, the provider could decline to operate the lift there (just as it refused to open the door for other passengers...
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Overlap: ADA Standard Section 603.2.2
Section 603.2.2 covers the current ADA Standards for overlapping clear floor space at fixtures and turning spaces in toilet and bathing rooms.
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General: ADA Standard Section 214.1
Section 214.1 of the ADA Standards covers information in the current ADA Standards on scoping requirements for washing machines and clothes dryers.
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Load and Unload Areas: ADA Standard Section 206.2.9.1
Section 206.2.9.1 covers scoping requirements in the most current ADA Standards for accessible routes to load and unload areas of amusement rides.
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General: ADA Standard Section 207.1
Section 207.1 of the ADA Standards covers information on scoping requirements for accessible means of egress in the most current ADA Standards.
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Medical Care and Long-Term Care Facilities: ADA Standard Section 209.3
Section 209.3 covers scoping requirements in the current ADA Standards for passenger loading zones at medical care and long-term care facilities.
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Existing Site Constraints: ADA Standard Section 206.7.5
Section 206.5.1 covers scoping requirements in the most current ADA Standards for the use of platform lifts due to existing site constraints.
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Spaces and Elements: ADA Standard Section 206.2.4
Section 206.2.4 covers the scoping requirements in the most current ADA Standards for accessible routes connecting spaces and elements within a building.
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General: ADA Standard Section 213.1
Section 210.1 of the ADA Standards covers information in the current ADA Standards on scoping requirements for toilet facilities and bathing facilities.
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General: ADA Standard Section 220.1
Section 220.1 of the ADA Standards covers information in the current ADA Standards on scoping requirements for automatic teller and fare machines.