The 1991 Standards permitted controls to be 54 inches maximum above the floor. The 2010 Standards specify controls to be 48 inches maximum above the floor....
Search Results "Feasibility (Technical, Infeasible, Structural, Maximum Extent)"
Commonly Searched Documents
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Safe Harbor
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233 Residential Facilities
An exception to these alteration scoping requirements is provided in the final rule where full compliance is technically infeasible (233.3.4, Exception)....
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Do the surface requirements, including those for maximum slope (1:48), apply to all portions of a parking lot?
No, the surface criteria apply only to accessible parking spaces, access aisles, and accessible routes, including those serving other elements or spaces besides parking spaces....
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1011.4 Picnic Tables
This section requires picnic tables to comply with the technical requirements for dining surfaces in 902.3 of the Architectural Barriers Act Accessibility Guidelines, which requires the...
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1.3.1 Overview of NPRM
The standards will allow independent entry to, use of and exit from the equipment by individuals with disabilities to the maximum extent possible....
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36 CFR Part 1195 Proposed Accessibility Standards for Medical Diagnostic Equipment NPRM
The proposed standards contain minimum technical criteria to ensure that medical diagnostic equipment, including examination tables, examination chairs, weight scales, mammography equipment...
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Raised Refereeing, Judging, and Scoring Areas: ADA Standard Section 203.10
Section 203.10 covers scoping requirements of general exceptions for raised refereeing, judging, and scoring areas in the most current ADA Standards.
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Facility
All or any portion of buildings, structures, site improvements, elements, and pedestrian routes or vehicular ways located on a site....
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704.8 Allowable area of openings
The maximum area of unprotected or protected openings permitted in an exterior wall in any story shall not exceed the values set forth in Table 704.8....
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810 Transportation Facilities
The proposed rule specified that these dimensions were required to "the maximum extent allowed by legal or site constraints" (1002.2.2)....
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7. What is a reasonable modification?
Dep’t of Justice, ADA Title III Technical Assistance Manual Covering Public Accommodations and Commercial Facilities § III-4.3600 (discussing a fundamental alteration as a modification that...
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ALTERATION
[DSA-AC] A change, addition or modification in construction, change in occupancy or use, or structural repair to an existing building or facility....
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214 and 611 Washing Machines and Clothes Dryers
2010 Standards specify the number of each type of these machines required to be accessible (one to two depending upon the total number of machines provided) and section 611 specifies the technical...
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FACILITY
[DSA-AC] All or any portion of buildings, structures, site improvements, elements, and pedestrian routes or vehicular ways located on a site....
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Dining Areas [5.4]/ Raised Platforms [5.7]
Platform lifts can be used at raised platforms that serve a head table or speaker's lectern but not other dining areas except where existing constraints make ramp (or elevator) access infeasible...
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3. EXCLUSIONS
Nevertheless, since the intended use of such excluded facilities may change with time or in emergencies, compliance with these DoD Standards is recommended to the maximum extent that is...
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15. When are "path of travel" obligations triggered?
For example, an alteration is planned for a portion of an existing composite play structure....
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M305.3 Standing Supports (Section-by-Section Analysis)
M305.3 provides the technical requirements for standing supports which are required on diagnostic equipment covered by M304....
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101.4 Referenced codes
The other codes listed in Sections 101.4.1 through 101.4.7 and referenced elsewhere in this code shall be considered part of the requirements of this code to the prescribed extent of each...
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Accessible Routes
Technical provisions address the width, slope, and surface of both ground level and elevated accessible routes....
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Section 610 Review
consider five factors: (1) The continued need for the rule; (2) the nature of complaints or comments received concerning the rule from the public; (3) the complexity of the rule; (4) the extent...
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Section 610 Review
consider five factors: (1) The continued need for the rule; (2) the nature of complaints or comments received concerning the rule from the public; (3) the complexity of the rule; (4) the extent...
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Getting From Here to There—Outdoor Recreation Access Routes
Section 2.0 of FSORAG contains the technical requirements for outdoor recreation access routes....