Accessibility is not a feature to be added later — it is a fundamental quality of good design. This hub brings together everything you need to understand, document, and advocate for truly inclusive built environments.
Accessibility is the degree to which a built environment, service, or product can be used by people with the widest possible range of abilities and needs — with dignity, comfort, and independence.
It goes beyond ramps and lifts. It includes clear wayfinding for people with visual impairments, quiet spaces for sensory sensitivities, wide corridors for powerchair users, and lowered counters for everyone shorter or seated.
These core elements form the baseline of any accessible built environment. Each principle is grounded in international standards and verified through real-world observation on the XplorAble platform.
No steps, lips, or sudden level changes at entrances, corridors, and transition zones.
Corridors at least 1500mm wide. Turning circles for wheelchairs (1800mm) at decision points.
Ramp gradients ≤1:12. Lifts min 1100×1400mm. Controls 800–1200mm AFF.
Outward-opening door. 1500mm turning space. Grab bars at WC. Bench in shower.
Tactile ground surface indicators. Contrasting colour edges. Auditory crossing signals. Visual emergency alerts.
Minimum 3.5m wide accessible bays. Marked clearly. Drop-off zones within 50m of main entrance.
Every place and hotel on XplorAble is assessed using a structured, replicable methodology developed with wheelchair users and accessibility professionals. We do not rely on self-reported information from operators.
XplorAble references established national and international standards as the basis for evaluation criteria. We do not certify buildings or claim compliance — we observe, document, and report what we find.
Non-certification note: XplorAble does not certify, accredit, or grade buildings for compliance with any standard. Our evaluations present observational data to help travellers understand actual conditions on the ground.
Travel Without Barriers — accessibility-first travel built by wheelchair users.