Chapter 2: Scoping Requirements
- 201 Application
- 202 Existing Buildings and Facilities
- 203 General Exceptions
- 204 Protruding Objects
- 205 Operable Parts
- 206 Accessible Routes
- 207 Accessible Means of Egress
- 208 Parking Spaces
- 209 Passenger Loading Zones and Bus Stops
- 210 Stairways
- 211 Drinking Fountains
- 212 Kitchens, Kitchenettes, and Sinks
- 213 Toilet Facilities and Bathing Facilities
- 214 Washing Machines and Clothes Dryers
- 215 Fire Alarm Systems
- 216 Signs
- 217 Telephones
- 218 Transportation Facilities
- 219 Assistive Listening Systems
- 220 Automatic Teller Machines and Fare Machines
- 221 Assembly Areas
- 222 Dressing, Fitting, and Locker Rooms
- 223 Medical Care and Long-Term Care Facilities
- 224 Transient Lodging Guest Rooms
- 225 Storage
- 226 Dining Surfaces and Work Surfaces
- 227 Sales and Service
- 228 Depositories, Vending Machines, Change Machines, Mail Boxes, and Fuel Dispensers
- 229 Windows
- 230 Two-Way Communication Systems
- 231 Judicial Facilities
- 232 Detention Facilities and Correctional Facilities
- 233 Residential Facilities
- 234 Amusement Rides
- 235 Recreational Boating Facilities
- 236 Exercise Machines and Equipment
- 237 Fishing Piers and Platforms
- 238 Golf Facilities
- 239 Miniature Golf Facilities
- 240 Play Areas
- 241 Saunas and Steam Rooms
- 242 Swimming Pools, Wading Pools, and Spas
- 243 Shooting Facilities with Firing Positions
Latest News
Featured
Case Study
Access Living
This project is an office building that models the intersection of universal and green design on an infill site in the River North neighborhood of Chicago. More +
News
Ed Roberts Campus - The Essence of Universal Design
Ed Roberts Campus is a universally designed campus that brings disability services together into one building. More +

Event
Accessibility: Comparisons, Compliance, and Universal Design
When: July 25 - 26, 2012
Where: Cambridge, MA
The 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design has introduced several new revisions to Titles II and III of The Americans With Disability Act of 1990. Discuss how to interpret and apply these new accessibility design laws with some of the industry leaders at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. MORE +
