On or after March 15, 2012, public entities must consider the supplemental requirements (such as swimming pools, play areas, and fishing piers) in the 2010 Standards to assess compliance...
Search Results "Pool Stair"
-
Title II: Program Accessibility
-
Effect on the certification process of using more than one regulatory scheme at the state or local level to establish accessibility requirements for title III facilities with new design requirements in the proposed standards. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
include requirements for elements and spaces that are not addressed specifically in the 1991 Standards, including elements within recreational facilities and play areas such as swimming pools...
-
Step 6 - Develop a Transition Plan
reason to update or create a new transition plan is that the current (2010) ADA Standards for Accessible Design include accessibility requirements for recreation areas such as swimming pools...
-
Background
Transfers are also required for enabling participation in a wide variety of community settings such as restaurants, parks, pools and medical offices....
-
Equipment and furniture. (Section-by-Section Analysis)
Some commenters urged the Department to require swimming pool operators to provide aquatic wheelchairs for the use of persons with disabilities when the swimming pool has a sloped entry....
- Yale Affinity® Smart Card Locks
-
New Customers
disabilities have too often been excluded from everyday activities: shopping at a corner store, going to a neighborhood restaurant or movie with family and friends, or using the swimming pool...
-
18 Inch Low Height
An example of providing a range is the pool seat lift accessibility standard per ADA and ABA 2004 Guidelines Section 1009.2.4, which clearly establishes that, even with adjustable devices...
-
A. Fire Alarms
2% of total rooms 1001 and over 20 plus 1 for each 100 over 1000 Other guest amenities, such as exercise/recreational areas, interior pools...
-
Near-Future Research Needs
The current Civilian and European Surface Anthropometric Resource (CAESAR) program1 is an example of how government and non-government organizations can pool resources to achieve a common...
-
Section 37.33 Airport Transportation Systems
One suggested solution to this problem is for the operators serving a given airport to form a pool or consortium arrangement, in which a number of shared accessible vehicles would meet the...
-
b) Uniform Physical Access Strategy or UPhAS
For instance, one of the maps shows all of the City's swimming pools located in San Francisco. DTX F16....
-
11B-221.2.3.2 Vertical dispersion
Points of entry to bleacher seating may include, but are not limited to, cross aisles, concourses, vomitories, and entrance ramps and stairs....
-
206.2.8 Employee Work Areas
Large pieces of equipment, such as electric turbines or water pumping apparatus, may have stairs and elevated walkways used for overseeing or monitoring purposes which are physically part...
-
What terms will let people know whether our facility is accessible?
A handicap is a barrier or circumstance that makes progress or success difficult, such as stairs that handicap passage by a person using a wheelchair....
-
206.2.8 Employee Work Areas
Large pieces of equipment, such as electric turbines or water pumping apparatus, may have stairs and elevated walkways used for overseeing or monitoring purposes which are physically part...
-
Alterations [4.1.6(1)(f) & (k)]
not exempt, ADAAG provides guidance on the type of alterations that may require vertical access between floors: major structural modifications resulting from replacement or addition of stairs...
-
Access to your doctor’s office or medical equipment
Or you may have problems getting around, walking, balancing, or climbing stairs. Why does access matter? Lack of access can hurt your health....
-
11B-221.2.3.2 Vertical dispersion
Points of entry to bleacher seating may include, but are not limited to, cross aisles, concourses, vomitories, and entrance ramps and stairs....
-
11B-221.2.3.2 Vertical dispersion
Points of entry to bleacher seating may include, but are not limited to, cross aisles, concourses, vomitories, and entrance ramps and stairs....
-
Ground Level Play Components: ADA Standard Section 240.2.1
Section 240.2.1 covers scoping requirements in the current ADA Standards for ground level play components.
-
11B-240.2.1 Ground level play components
Where a stand-alone slide is provided, an accessible route must connect the base of the stairs at the entry point to the exit point of the slide....
-
11B-240.2.1 Ground level play components
Where a stand-alone slide is provided, an accessible route must connect the base of the stairs at the entry point to the exit point of the slide....
-
Physical Accessibility
For example, if stairs lead to the upper floors of a school and the school does not have an elevator, ramp, or chair lift, and a student with a disability is unable to traverse the stairs...