Accessibility is not a design preference; it is a set of measurable conditions that must exist in the built environment at the time of use. For architects, contractors, facility managers, and inspectors, the challenge isn't just reading the standards-it's verifying them in the field where minor construction deviations can cumulatively move a feature from compliant to noncompliant.
This handbook serves as a practical, inspection-oriented companion to the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design and the ABA Accessibility Standards. Instead of dense regulatory text, this guide distills core requirements into clear, measurable criteria: dimensions that can be taped, slopes that can be checked with a level, and clearances that can be objectively observed.
In this handbook, you will find:
Who this book is for: Written for practitioners who need to translate federal accessibility standards into field-verifiable conditions, this guide is an essential reference for architects, engineers, contractors, accessibility consultants, and facility managers.
Ensure your projects meet the technical baseline of federal law. Move beyond "looks accessible" and master the science of verification.