Characters shall be conventional in form. Characters shall not be italic, oblique, script, highly decorative, or of other unusual forms.
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703.5.3 Style
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703.5.6 Height From Finish Floor or Ground
Visual characters shall be 40 inches (1015 mm) minimum above the finish floor or ground. EXCEPTION: Visual characters indicating elevator car controls shall not be required to...
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703.1 General
Signs shall comply with 703. Where both visual and tactile characters are required, either one sign with both visual and tactile characters, or two separate signs, one with visual,...
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§27.71(j) Shared-use automated airport kiosks.
(j) Shared-use automated airport kiosks. This paragraph applies to U.S. airports with 10,000 or more annual enplanements.
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§ 27.71(j) Shared-use automated airport kiosks
(j) Shared-use automated airport kiosks. This paragraph applies to U.S. airports with 10,000 or more annual enplanements.
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216.1 General
216.1 General. Signs shall be provided in accordance with 216 and shall comply with 703. EXCEPTIONS: 1. Building directories, menus, seat and row designations in assembly areas,...
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703.1 General
703.1 General. Signs shall comply with 703. Where both visual and tactile characters are required, either one sign with both visual and tactile characters, or two separate signs, one...
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703.5.6 Height from Finish Floor or Ground
703.5.6 Height from Finish Floor or Ground. Visual characters shall be 40 inches (1015 mm) minimum above the finish floor or ground. EXCEPTION: Visual characters indicating...
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703.5.3 Style
703.5.3 Style. Characters shall be conventional in form. Characters shall not be italic, oblique, script, highly decorative, or of other unusual forms.
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F216.1 General
Signs shall be provided in accordance with F216 and shall comply with 703.
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4.1.1(7)
(7) All signs shall comply with 4.30. Elements and spaces of accessible facilities which shall be identified by the International Symbol of Accessibility are: (a) Parking spaces...
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11B-703.1 General
11B-703.1 General. Signs shall comply with Section 11B-703. Where both visual and tactile characters are required, either one sign with both visual and tactile characters, or two...
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11B-703.5.3 Style
11B-703.5.3 Style. Characters shall be conventional in form. Characters shall not be italic, oblique, script, highly decorative, or of other unusual forms.
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11B-703.5.3 Style
Characters shall be conventional in form. Characters shall not be italic, oblique, script, highly decorative, or of other unusual forms.
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11B-703.1 General
Signs shall comply with Section 11B-703. Where both visual and tactile characters are required, either one sign with both visual and tactile characters, or two separate signs, one...
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Communication / Devices / Equipment / Other
Review and update your emergency information when your medications or other information changes, but no less than twice a year....
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UFAS vs. ADAAG Comparison - Assembly Seating
UFAS vs ADAAG - Assembly Seating Click here to view/download pdf version (36 KB) Capacity of Seating & (in) Assembly Areas Combined...
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4. Coverage of Real-Time Text
Commenters representing people with disabilities (and also academia) urged the Board to adopt RFC 4103 for RTT interoperating with VoIP using SIP, and provided information to support its...
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Directional visual sign vs. room identification tactile sign
If that is how this sign is used, it would be classified as a "visual" sign, and would require conformance with the ADA Standards section 703.5, and would not require the raised lettering...
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What is a transition plan? Does every facility need one?
All units were informed of the timeline requirement....
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Links
americans-with-disabilities-act-intro Americans with Disabilities Act/Architectural Barriers Act Accessibility Guidelines http://www.access-board.gov/guidelines-and-standards/buildings-and-sites/about-the-ada-standards...
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B. Legal foundation for Web accessibility
When the ADA was enacted in 1990, the Internet as we know it today—the ubiquitous infrastructure for information and commerce—did not exist....
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CASI 2014 Summer Training
CASI 2014 Summer Training