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You are here: Home > Health After 60 > Remodeling for Wheelchair Access: Renovate or Move?


Remodeling for Wheelchair Access: Renovate or Move?


Related topics:
•  Remodeling for Wheelchair Access
•  Remodeling for Wheelchair Access: Kitchens

Gabriel Wolff
CONSUMER HEALTH INTERACTIVE

Below:
 • Weigh your needs carefully
 • Consider moving
 • Look at the big picture
 • Look for reliable help


Keep the following points in mind before you decide to overhaul your home to make it wheelchair accessible:

Weigh your needs carefully

Ideally, changes should be designed specifically for the individual. The optimum width of a wheelchair accessible doorway, for example, depends not only on the width of the wheelchair and the angle of approach, but on the ability of the person who has to get the chair through it. Consulting with a rehabilitation therapist familiar with your case can help. Careful assessment will ensure that you end up with the features you need and save you time and money by eliminating those you don't.

Consider moving

Difficult as it may seem, it might just be easier to move. Some floorplans are either to difficult or prohibitively expensive to adapt. A two-story home can certainly be made wheelchair accessible, but you may not want to give up the space or money required to install an elevator. Ultimately, the choice is personal.

Look at the big picture

It's function you're after, but form needn't suffer as a result. As with any home alteration, changes should complement the existing design whenever possible. Matching existing materials will give your project a seamless appearance. Keeping this in mind will not only make your changes more pleasing to the eye; it will preserve or even enhance the resale value of your home. Intelligently designed, well built, barrier-free homes have flowing floorplans and are inherently spacious.

Look for reliable help

The scope of your project may require the use of a contractor and/or an architect. If possible, choose folks who are knowledgeable and experienced in barrier-free homes. They should be able to listen to your specific needs and be willing to depart from common standards, if necessary, to accommodate you. Check their references carefully and ask to see an example of their completed work.

-- Gabriel Wolff is a former biology teacher and lab technician at UC Santa Cruz who specializes in home remodeling.



References


Martha F. Somers. Spinal Cord Injury: Functional Rehabilitation. Appleton &Lange. Norwalk, Conn: 1990, 339 pp. See Chapter 18: Architectural Adaptations.

Nondescrimination on the Basis of Disability by Public Accommodations. Federal Register. Department of Justice, Office of the Attorney General. Part III, July 26, 1991. 28 CRF Part 36.

Adaptable Housing: A Technical Manual for Implementing Adaptable Dwelling Unit Specifications. Boston, Mace, &Long, 1987.



Reviewed by Patrick Irvine, MD, a noted geriatrician and pharmacologist who lives in Minneapolis, MN.


Our reviewers are members of Consumer Health Interactive's medical advisory board.
To learn more about our writers and editors, click here.

First published July 25, 2000
Last updated December 20, 2007
Copyright © 2000 Consumer Health Interactive


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