Conditions that affect mobility include conditions requiring the use or assistance of a brace, cane, crutch, prosthetic device, wheelchair, or powered mobility aid; arthritic, neurological...
Search Results "Wheelchair User"
Commonly Searched Documents
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11B-223.2.2 Facilities specializing in treating conditions that affect mobility
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Chapter 3: Building Blocks
These requirements address floor and ground surfaces (302), changes in level (303), wheelchair turning space (304), clear floor or ground space (305), knee and toe clearance (306), protruding...
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Accessible Routes
Accessible Routes An accessible route is a pathway specifically designed to provide access for individuals with disabilities, including those using wheelchairs or mobility devices....
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106.5.66 Structural Impracticability
., those who use wheelchairs) would be structurally impracticable, accessibility shall nonetheless be ensured to persons with other types of disabilities (e.g., those who use crutches or...
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C. Accessibility Within Toilet Rooms
Is there an area within the toilet room where a person who uses a wheelchair or mobility device can turn around - either a minimum 60-inch diameter circle or a “T”-shaped turn area?...
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Forward Approach
The 17 to 19 inch clearance depth allows people using wheelchairs to pull up far enough under the unit to reach the spout....
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Instrumentation for Analysis
Following the visual inspection of the nine locations, testing for wheelchair accessibility specific to firmness and stability was conducted with the application of a Rotational Penetrometer...
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4.1.2(18)
18) Assembly areas: (a) If places of assembly are provided, they shall comply with the following table: Capacity of Seating & Assembly Areas Number of Required Wheelchair...
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Exception Based on Structural Impracticability in DOJ’s 2010 ADA Standards and DOT's ADA Regulations
In addition, access must be provided for individuals with other types of disabilities, even if it may be structurally impracticable to provide access to individuals who use wheelchairs....
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Employee Work Areas [§206.2.8]
This requires a connecting accessible route to the work area, a compliant entrance, including entry doors or gates, and a wheelchair space within the work area....
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Rehabilitation and Outpatient Physical Therapy Facilities [§208.2.2]
Conditions affecting mobility include: those involving the use of mobility aids and devices (braces, canes, crutches, prosthetic devices, wheelchairs, or powered mobility aids);...
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Guestroom Doors
Result: Doors and doorways into and within guestrooms and suites and, in particular, bathroom doors and doorways within these spaces are too narrow to allow persons who use wheelchairs...
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11B-223.2.2 Facilities specializing in treating conditions that affect mobility
Conditions that affect mobility include conditions requiring the use or assistance of a brace, cane, crutch, prosthetic device, wheelchair, or powered mobility aid; arthritic, neurological...
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11B-704.4.1 Height
A telephone with a TTY installed underneath cannot also be a wheelchair accessible telephone because the required 34 inches (865 mm) minimum keypad height can causes the highest operable...
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1133A.2 Clear floor space
Clear floor space at kitchens shall comply with the following: A clear floor space at least 30 inches (762 mm) by 48 inches (1219 mm) that allows a parallel approach by a person in a wheelchair...
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11B-704.4.1 Height
A telephone with a TTY installed underneath cannot also be a wheelchair accessible telephone because the required 34 inches (865 mm) minimum keypad height can causes the highest operable...
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5. Interoperability Requirements for Assistive Technology
ICT and assistive technologies must generally work together to provide users with necessary interface functions and features....
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Volume Control
Mute features on public pay telephones can increase audibility by temporarily disconnecting the telephone’s microphone while the user listens through the ear piece so that background noise...
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§35.162 Telephone Emergency Services
In response, the final rule mandates ‘‘direct access,’’ instead of ‘‘access that is functionally equivalent’’ to that provided to all other telephone users....
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D. Captioning and Video Description Generally
A clear adjustable panel that is mounted on, or near an individual viewer´s seat reflects the captions correctly and superimposes them on that panel so that it appears to a Rear Window user...
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§35.162 Telephone Emergency Services (Section-by-Section Analysis)
In response, the final rule mandates ``direct access,'' instead of ``access that is functionally equivalent'' to that provided to all other telephone users....
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Fixed position maps and kiosks
Good tactile cartography requires significant user testing to ensure that symbols, line types and textures will be readable and clear to the multiple constituencies who must be considered...
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Talking Three-Dimensional Models for Way-finding
Models are probably more intuitive to use for an inexperienced or young blind user as compared to tactile maps, which require additional layers of abstract thinking....
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Online Barriers Faced By People with Disabilities
Simply adding a line of simple hidden computer code to label the photograph “Photograph of Mayor Jane Smith” will allow the blind user to make sense of the image....