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The Inclusive City: Delivering A More Accessible Urban Environment Through Inclusive Design
The Inclusive City: Delivering A More Accessible Urban Environment Through Inclusive Design
inclusive design.
Gower Street,
Abstract
This paper examines the reasons why the design of urban public space in the UK has failed to
provide easy access to the city centre for older people and people with disabilities. After tracing
the impact of medical, social, and bio-social models of disability on professional attitudes and
values, the account goes on to consider ‘architectural disability’ that is produced by the design
of the built environment. The distinctions between general needs, special needs and inclusive
design are examined, and the impact of these different approaches is considered in respect of
built environment legislation and architectural practice. Access to the city centre is
conceptualised in terms of the ‘transport chain’ and public toilets are identified as a missing
link in that chain. The provision of accessible ‘away from home’ toilets in city centres is
examined as a worked example of the tension that currently exists between designing for
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special needs and inclusive design. The paper concludes by speculating about the part that
For the first time in the history of the planet, urbanisation has become the fundamental human
condition. Urban populations are growing three times faster than overall populations and soon,
three-quarters of the world’s people will be city dwellers, (Giradet, 1996). Cities are the engine
of economic development, employment and opportunity. They can be diverse, vibrant and
exciting places, especially for the young, but many are also polluted, congested, overcrowded
and crime-ridden. More specifically the urban built environments, particularly the pedestrian
environments that we have created, are not sympathetic to the needs of older people and people
with disabilities.
Figures representing the number of people with disabilities in the United Kingdom vary widely
depending on the source, but what can be inferred from the available data is that a significant
percentage of the population may be considered (by themselves or by the definitions found in
various models) to have an impairment which, “has a substantial and long term effect on [their]
ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities” (Disability Rights Commission, (DRC), 2002,
p.119). In 2001, the Office of National Statistics reported that 8% of adults recorded having
difficulties going out of doors (Office of National Statistics, 2002). A conservative estimate in
2002 reported that 12-13% of the population (5 million people) has some form of impairment
(Oxley, 2002), whilst a current estimate by the Disability Rights Commission suggests that one
in five adults in Great Britain is a disabled person (DRC, 2002). Further breakdowns of figures
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reveal that two-thirds of disabled people are aged over 60 years, the majority of whom are
female. With the demographics of aging predicted to shift progressively over the next 30 years,
current estimates suggest that by 2030 the population aged over 65 will have doubled, whilst
those in the population aged over eighty years in age will have trebled (Atkins, 2001; Frye,
2003). These figures not only suggest that a large proportion of the population may currently
experience difficulty in gaining access to many aspects of the built environment due to the wide
array of explicit and unseen barriers to access that currently exist, but also that unless we
address the issue of accessibility within the built environment now, this problem is set to
Older and disabled people have much to gain from living in cities, and cities will undoubtedly
awareness that all building users should be able to carry out their work and leisure activities
efficiently, safely and pleasurably according to their abilities. Yet, despite a wealth of
government directives on access, the design of the built environment has lagged behind.
Indeed, the urban built environment represents the most concrete example of how people with
Despite the imminent implementation of Part III of the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA,
1995) that will come into force in October 2004 and which, for the first time, directly addresses
the design of physical features within the built environment that are a barrier to access, many
commercial and public buildings are still not accessible for wheelchair users, few buildings
provide the aids and signage to assist wayfinding by people with sensory impairments and most
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public transport systems exclude people with a wide range of disabilities. No one maintains
overall responsibility for the design of the urban public realm and so improvements to public
access are patchy and piecemeal. Disabled people are therefore denied opportunities to lead
independent lives because the poor design of our cities and urban centres poses barriers to
The urban public realm presents some of the greatest challenges in breaking down barriers that
impede disabled people’s access to the city centre. Although some city space may be
considered accessible, the topography of the wider urban environment has created spaces of
physical inaccessibility and social exclusion for older and disabled people. Imrie (2001, p.232)
notes that dividing the city into those who can or who cannot access its space generates
“distinctive spatialities of demarcation and exclusion”. The design of the city’s physical
infrastructure, pedestrian realm and transport systems have thus far prevented people with
disabilities from participating in areas of urban social life taken for granted by the able bodied,
and in effect have set apart non-disabled from disabled people. Segregation by physical access
creates an urban environment that has been defined by some authors as ‘enclosed’, ‘barriered’
and ‘bounded’, and a ‘space of exclusion’ for many in the population (Gleeson, 2001; Imrie,
2001). Kitchin and Law (2001) consider disabled people to have their movement and mobility
circumscribed by their limited access, leading to a particular and selective use of cities based on
infrastructure limitations.
From a design point of view, the 'holy grail' is 'seamless travel' where everyone can move
effortlessly from origin to destination, between various modes of transport and from building to
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building and place to place within the urban fabric. However, many aspects of the design of the
built environment currently deter older and disabled people from using town centres, including
difficult access and changes of level, high, steep steps, poorly maintained pavements, busy
roads with few controlled crossing points, isolated, unlit bus stops, a dearth of adequate seating
and inadequate public toilet provision. Other deterrents include perceptions that the urban
environment is unsafe, the high costs of travel by public transport, lack of information,
unhelpful drivers and unreliability of public services, (Atkins, 2001). Until these problems are
resolved, policy statements that emphasise the importance of an inclusive urban environment
will be perceived by at least some members of society to be little more than empty platitudes.
This account therefore sets out to examine some of the reasons why urban design has failed to
rise to the challenge of an increasingly diverse society. Starting from definitions of disability
that historically were based on medical models, it will be suggested that until recently designers
onus was placed on the individual to adapt the ‘abnormal’ body to an environment that
appeared to have evolved ‘naturally’ to suit ‘normal’ people. The pragmatic solution was to
design for ‘special needs’, thus perpetuating the distinction between mainstream society and
minority groups.
This approach will be contrasted with more recent socio-cultural models of disability, which
propose that the environment itself actively produces disability. According to these models, a
person becomes disabled by the barriers they face, not by their impairment. The policies,
practices and values of built environment professionals and disabled people’s own reticence
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about articulating their needs then combine with self-limiting behaviour to ensure that this
unjust situation remains unchallenged. The issue of the inclusive design of ‘away from home’
toilets will be used to illustrate more general social attitudes to the provision of access for
people with disabilities to the built environment and its building stock.
All human beings operate within a range of abilities and are able to do different things at
different ages. Ability is therefore a relative concept, relative that is to the abilities that are
considered to lie within the normal range of behaviours for a human being at a particular
chronological age. Set within this context, disability becomes synonymous with deviation from
the normal. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO, 1980), ‘impairment’, is a loss
refers to any limitation or lack of ability resulting from an impairment, when performing an
activity in the manner or within the range considered normal for a human being. ‘Handicap’
disability, that limits or prevents the fulfilment of a role that would be considered normal for a
person of the same age, gender and circumstances. These definitions imply a causal chain,
This causal chain is not, however, accepted uncritically. For example, disability rights
organisations take issue with the implication entailed in definitions which propose that the
disabled body is not normal and that disabled people are either patients with a medical
condition that needs to be treated, or victims of some personal tragedy and so need to be looked
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after. Disability activists offer alternative definitions of disability, based on the assertion that
attention to the needs of people with physical, sensory or cognitive impairments so that they are
excluded from mainstream social life. This makes disability an issue of social justice and
inclusion.
These diametrically opposed positions are associated, respectively, with the ‘medical’ and the
‘social’ model of disability. The medical model assumes that disability is caused by an
impairment, which then becomes the focus of attention. The medical approach seeks to
ameliorate or cure the impairment and, by so doing, to reduce or eliminate the disability. The
danger in this approach is that people are reduced to stereotypes defined by their disability. At
the same time, the individual becomes the focus of change and society is absolved of the
The social model, on the other hand, asserts that whilst individuals may have impairments that
may or may not require medical treatment, this need not prevent disabled people from being
able to live a normal and fulfilling life. Rather, it is society’s unwillingness to devote enough
resources to ensure that they do, which is the root cause of social exclusion. The social model
legislation and so on, that prevent disabled people from enjoying the same advantages as non-
disabled people. This view stresses the importance of broader attitudinal and environmental
factors in shaping disabled people’s lives arguing, in effect, that disability is socially produced.
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These two opposed models have both been criticised for selectively emphasising different
aspects of disability; the medical model for ignoring social values and attitudes and the social
model for denying the debilitating effects people experience as a result of impairment. A third
position, the ‘bio-social’ model attempts to reconcile medical and social positions by proposing
that the make up of the human body affects an individual’s ability to interact with the built
environment but at the same time who or what is defined as disabled depends on social
attitudes and values. As Imrie and Hall (2001. p.35) observe, “bio-social perspectives note that
impairment is usually collapsed into a series of general and chaotic categories, such as vision,
mobility and hard-of-hearing, which do little to reveal the complexities of impairment. Indeed,
impairment is neither fixed nor static, or confined to any particular part of the population. It can
on circumstances”.
for example, there is no agreed definition of impaired vision and every vision impaired
person’s experience of sight loss is unique - and the diversity of social responses to impairment,
which can range from empathy and inclusion to intolerance and ostracism. The richer
framework afforded by the bio-social model allows the issue of multiple disability to be
addressed, thus providing a more holistic alternative to the stereotyped accounts based on
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Figure 1. Dimensions of disability
For example, in a recent study of vision impaired adults (Hanson et al, 2004) just over half of
all those consulted had additional major health problems to serious sight loss, and this figure
approached nine out of ten among older vision impaired people (Hanson et al, 2002). Though
the most numerous combination, affecting about half of all those with additional disabilities,
was sensory and physical impairment, the majority of informants reported a complex cocktail
of health conditions. Multiple disability is a far more challenging issue for urban design than
that of making towns and cities more accessible for people with reduced mobility, as it requires
experienced as disabling.
One important factor that can either constrain or enable disabled people’s lives is the design of
the physical environment. ‘Architectural disability’ is a term that has been used (Goldsmith,
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1997) to describe how the physical design, layout and construction of buildings and places can
confront people with hazards and barriers which make the built environment inconvenient,
uncomfortable or unsafe and may even prevent some people from using it at all. Here too the
word ‘disability’ implies a loss of functionality, but in this case the term refers to badly
designed, shoddily built or poorly maintained buildings, which are dysfunctional in that they
A moment’s thought confirms that poorly designed buildings can disable or handicap older
people, children, adults with babies in pushchairs, larger, taller or smaller people and those
carrying heavy loads, as well as people with a physical, sensory or cognitive impairment. Some
features of buildings may not even be convenient for young, healthy and able-bodied people.
Almost everyone experiences problems in using the built environment at some time in their
lives. Seen in this light, we are all potential or actual victims of architectural discrimination as a
result of conventional building design. One design manual (Wylde et al., 1994) suggests that as
many as 90% of individuals may be architecturally disabled in some way or other at some time
in their life.
Lawton (1974) has concentrated on how the built environment can restrict options for older
people. He uses the more neutral term ‘environmental pressure’ to describe the impact that
poorly designed homes, public buildings and places can have on people's lives. He defines
environmental pressure as a state induced by the necessity of dealing with environments built
for younger, fitter people which may render the older person more vulnerable, or more docile
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increase in environmental pressure could account for the apparent negative effects of ageing,
particularly as older people are only able to adapt within a relatively narrow range of
architectural variables. More positively, he asserts that small improvements to the older
so that “the payoff for effective environmental intervention is very high for older people in
poor mental or physical health”, (ibid., p.259). Exactly the same propositions would apply in
the case of people with a disability. For both groups, a well-designed environment has the
Imrie and Hall (2001, p. 36) have identified four assumptions that are current within the
construction industry that prevent the built environment from being designed in such a way as
1) there is insufficient demand among disabled people to justify providing a more accessible
built environment;
3) meeting the needs of wheelchair users is sufficient to meet the needs of all disabled people;
and
Another contributory factor may be that design guidance tends to utilise anthropometric data
that are based on average body dimensions and characteristics. These data reinforce the view
that human bodies come in standard shapes and sizes, and that designing for the average,
normal person will ensure that most people’s requirements are satisfied. However, one of the
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most powerful disincentives for the inclusive design of the built environment is professional
attitudes and assumptions, encapsulated in the distinction between general and special needs.
Throughout the second half of the twentieth century, the medical model of disability was
enshrined within the design professions in the distinction between ‘general’ and ‘special’
needs. This opposition still lies at the heart of many current discussions and debates about the
design of the built environment. The terms originated with the birth of the Welfare State and,
for much of the late twentieth century in the UK at least, they seemed so natural and obvious
that all other options were excluded from thought. Design for general needs assumed that the
client or end-user of the building or product was a young, physically fit, educated, middle class
(usually) male adult who embodied the anthropometric stereotype. Design for special needs
then addressed the requirements of all those groups who did not fit the previous definition of
the client, such as children, older people, those with mental health problems and women.
According to this viewpoint, people with physical, sensory or cognitive impairments are, by
At the time, the ‘special needs’ approach seemed a pragmatic way of solving practical
problems, by tailoring buildings and products so that they were ‘just right’ for each particular
client group. However, insofar as it was based on needs not rights, it led to a remedial,
which there was invariably a low take up of purpose-built solutions whilst, so far as buildings
and products are concerned, it has led to unattractive, stigmatising, remedial environments that
announce people’s disability to the public at large. More recently, the approach has been
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criticised for assuming that the design process is divided into ‘us (the designers) versus them
(the users)’, as opposed to designing for ‘all of us’ (Sklar and Suri, 2001).
Today, the approach has changed from one of tailoring buildings and products for fragmented
constituencies of people with special needs and instead, greater stress is being placed upon the
importance of ‘inclusive design’, ‘universal design’ or 'design for all'. Inclusive design means
creating environments and products that are usable by all, without the need for specialist
adaptation or design, see Figure 2. This goal arises out of the understanding that disability is
socially defined.
An inclusive environment is one in which all users, whatever their abilities, are able to carry
out their day to day activities comfortably, effectively and safely without being restricted by the
poor design, maintenance or management of the built environment. The principles of inclusive
design aim to accommodate the broadest range of bodily shapes, dimensions and movements,
in the belief that designers and manufacturers should ensure that buildings, products and
services address the needs of the widest possible audience, see Figure 3. A key outcome for
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inclusive design should therefore be to both alleviate environmental pressure and architectural
disability, and also to achieve a greater measure of social equity and justice. However, critics of
inclusive design argue that in many cases it is impossible to provide a ‘one size fits all’
Principle Description
Figure 3. Principles of Inclusive Design (adapted from the Center for Univeral Design, 1995)
Benktzon (1993) has therefore proposed a ‘design pyramid’ as a graphic illustration of how to
overcome the objection that inclusive design is an unrealisable goal. She has divided the
population into three broad but unequal bands, see Figure 4. At the base of Benktzon’s
pyramid are the large numbers of able-bodied people, the middle layer comprises people with
reduced capabilities and at the top are the small numbers of people with severe impairments,
including “people in wheelchairs and people with very limited strength and mobility in their
hands and arms”, (ibid., p.19). The approach assumes that if products are designed to be used
by a particular layer, they will automatically be useable by all those in the lower layers.
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Figure 4. Benktzon’s design pyramid (adapted from Benktzon, 1993).
Three levels of ‘inclusion’ have therefore been more generally adopted by the proponents of
2) Mainstream products that can be customised for use by people with disabilities; and
This allows for customised and tailored products to meet a need in situations where it is
everyone. Clearly, this approach can be extended to the design of the built environment.
Building on Benktzon’s user pyramid, Keates et al (2001) have developed a more sophisticated
model known as the ‘Inclusive Design Cube’, to support designers in conceptualising the
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complex design processes involved in understanding the requirements of users with a wide
range of abilities. Starting from the position that the designer should be concerned with
people’s capabilities, not their disabilities, the authors advocate a proactive approach that
assumes a wide range of user capabilities from the inception of the design.
The cube is a model that relates together capability, population profile and design decision-
making in a simple graphical format, see Figure 5. Each axis of the cube represents the users’
physical, sensory and cognitive capability, and the enclosed volume represents the population
included. The largest enclosed (grey) volume represents the proposition that inclusive or ‘user-
aware’ design will generate products that can be used by large sections of the population but
recognises that these are likely to be inaccessible to people with reduced capability in any of
the three dimensions. For the most severely impaired users at the extremes of the cube (black),
it may be necessary to tailor products through special-purpose design. For people with
provided that it was originally designed using inclusive design principles. Conversely, it
should be possible to increase the potential population of users of any building or product by
using technology and design to augment the users’ motor skills, senses or cognition. In
principle, this model is able both to specify capacity more precisely and to address the complex
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Figure 5. The Inclusive Design Cube (reproduced from Keates et al., 2000)
(2000) has devised a ‘universal design pyramid’, see Figure 6. When checking to see if a
building is convenient for all its users, Goldsmith proposes that the architect should begin with
row 1 at the base of the pyramid, which represents fit and active people who can “run and
jump, leap up stairs, climb perpendicular ladders, dance exuberantly and carry loads of heavy
baggage”, (ibid., p.2). In row 2 are normal adults who, whilst not being athletic, can still move
about freely in the environment. No additional considerations need to apply when designing for
these user-groups. The straight line A represents the satisfaction of these people’s requirements
by unselfconscious design.
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Row 3 also represents active people, but in this case they happen to be women, who Goldsmith
points out are subject to architectural discrimination whenever they use public buildings
because they need to queue for the toilet, as women are not provided with enough facilities. In
row 4 are older people, who probably would not regard themselves as disabled even though
they may be less active and possibly use a walking aid, and adults with children in pushchairs.
Both groups experience difficulty using a normal WC compartment in public buildings because
of inadequate space. In row 5 are ambulant disabled people. Goldsmith argues that none of
rows 3-5 inclusive would be inconvenienced, if architects were to design normal toilet
provision for members of the public that accommodated these people’s requirements for a level
access and extra space within the cubicle. A ‘universal’ (to use Goldsmith’s preferred term)
approach could therefore extend the parameters of design to encompass all these user-groups
The people in row 6 are independent wheelchair users. In the UK, since the mid 1980s, this
group has been legislated for by Part M of the Building Regulations. These have historically
taken a ‘special needs’ approach to design. Thus, wheelchair users are provided with a special,
unisex accessible WC compartment, which is not available to ordinary members of the general
public, see Figure 7. The ‘for the disabled’ prescription inscribed in earlier versions of the
Building Regulations ensures that the needs of this group are accommodated, but this will not
be of assistance to people in rows 3,4 and 5 who, not being disabled, are consequently
excluded. Line C represents the satisfaction of wheelchair users and hints that the people in the
tiers below could be accommodated if ‘disabled’ toilet provision were to be extended to other
groups. Those in rows 7 and 8 are users whose needs are not covered by current legislation.
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The individuals in row 7 are wheelchair users who need assistance to go to the toilet, and
scooter users. People in row 8 need two carers. Many people in these tiers could access public
Unlike the inclusive design cube, Goldsmith’s universal design pyramid is heavily weighted
towards the needs of people with impaired locomotion. In row 5 there is a person with
impaired vision, guided by her dog, but this is a rare exception. Goldsmith argues that it is
adults with locomotion impairments who are able to benefit most from inclusive / universal
design. He acknowledges the limitations of his particular approach with respect to children
but not the potential benefits that could accrue were inclusive design principles to be extended
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to those with sensory or cognitive impairments as he claims that, “by way of information
conveyed on architectural drawings, the scope available to help people with sensory or
cognitive disabilities is tiny by comparison”, (ibid., p. 4). However, this statement does not
take account of the ability of a building’s written specification to record information that
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Goldsmith’s position, which gives greater prominence to designing to take account of physical
researchers. Imrie and Hall (2001, p.43), for example, have pointed out that “by responding
principally to the needs of wheelchair users, such professionals are reacting, in effect, to a
minority of people with physical and mental impairments” rather than to the majority of
disabled people who have a wide range of physical, sensory and cognitive impairments.
Likewise, Greed (2003) notes that current guidance on many aspects of design is shaped
principally by the needs of wheelchair users, even though these are not the most numerous
disabled grouping. Giving as an example, the current BS8300 unisex accessible toilet illustrated
in Figure 7, she observes that because toilets for disabled people are represented by the
wheelchair logo, this presents a narrow, stereotypical definition of disability which excludes
people with other impairments and ‘hidden disabilities’. The use of the wheelchair symbol to
indicate accessible entrances, routes and spaces does nothing to widen popular perceptions of
disability.
overcome the limitations of individual viewpoints. It has many advantages, compared with non-
inclusive design, see Figure 8. However, it demands a user-centred approach to design that
actively seeks to understand users’ requirements. This has been characterised (Sommer, 1983)
as ‘social design’. The crux of social design is working with people, not for them. This implies
the (at least partial) surrender of the role of designer as expert in favour of a more participatory
approach. As Imire and Hall (2001, p.20) point out, “users’ knowledge is potentially a key
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resource and the point is not to challenge the architectural or design skills of professionals per
se, but to interlink them more effectively with the experiential knowledge of lay people”.
However, Imrie and Hall (ibid., p. 14) also caution that, “the potentially radicalising effect of
social architecture or design has barely resonated with, or influenced, developers, designers or
Inclusive design has the potential to be a radical force within the urban design process that
could lead to more sustainable communities which, as defined by Egan (2004, p. 7), “meet the
diverse needs of existing and future residents, their children and other users, contribute to a
high quality of life and provide opportunity and choice.” Currently, the main instruments in the
UK to ensure that access to buildings and services is provided for disabled people are Part M of
the Building Regulations (2004), BS8300 (2001) and the DDA (1995). Specifically, from
October 2004, the DDA will place a new duty on service providers to make ‘reasonable
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access that arise from how the building has been designed or constructed, including how
buildings are approached and entered, so as not to discriminate against disabled people. The
aim of the Act is to ensure that goods and services are made available to everyone in the same
way. Offering disabled people an alternative form of service to that provided for non-disabled
people, whilst acceptable under the terms of the Act, is considered to be an inferior solution to
that of ‘debarriering’ the environment. In this respect, the intention of the Act is to adopt an
inclusive approach to design. Yet at the same time, much of the language used in the Act,
beginning with its emphasis on ‘disability’ rather than ‘enablement’ perpetuates the medical
This criticism can also be directed to the latest version of Part M of the Building Regulations,
which has been updated to support Part III of the DDA. As mentioned earlier, Part M was
originally introduced in the 1980s, extended in 1992 and 1998, and has been revised with effect
from May 2004. It provides general guidance to developers on access standards, and
information on some of the ways in which the requirements set out in the Regulations can be
satisfied. Insofar as the current Regulations require that “reasonable provision shall be made for
people (author’s emphasis) to gain access to and use of the building and its facilities” its
language is more explicitly inclusive than previous versions, whose reference group was
disabled people. The new Part M is intended to assist many more people within society than
wheelchair users and those with limited mobility, including people with babies or small
children and those encumbered by luggage. Consideration is also given to the access
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So far as individual buildings are concerned, we are currently witnessing a sea change as
service providers conduct access audits and alter their premises in order to fulfil their enhanced
obligations under the terms of the DDA. From this year, new buildings and alterations or
extensions to existing buildings will need to take account of the minimum legal standards for
access set out in Part M. Even so, recent research by the Department for Work and Pensions
(Roberts et.al., 2004) has revealed a low level of awareness among service providers about
equal access legislation, with fewer than half of the businesses surveyed being aware of the
impending changes. This is not the place to discuss the meaning of the key terms in Part III of
the Act or Part M of the Building Regulations, as there is widespread agreement that in the final
analysis it is the courts that will determine whether a service provider is in breach of the new
laws. It is sufficient to note here that the new access directives apply to buildings but not to
Bennett (1990) and Imrie (1996) have noted that policy and regulations are often poorly
enforced by the responsible authorities, and so implementing the DDA may require a number
of court actions to be taken. Part M has also been criticised as weak legislation that “couches
regulations in a vague and ambiguous manner, which does little to define clearly what is
possible” (Imrie and Hall, 2001). The requirement that ‘reasonable provision’ be made for
people’s access is a particularly contentious issue, that Barnes (1991) has argued permits too
much latitude as to how this is interpreted in practice. Goldsmith (1997) has noted that
‘reasonable provision’ may result in changes to access being ‘tacked onto’ a building. Gleeson
(2001) adds that poor implementation coupled to a lack of performance evaluation of any
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‘improvements’ made, could lead to ‘a deeper sense of cynicism’ and subsequent ‘political
exclusion’ amongst the very people that the legislation was intended to help.
Without careful consideration of the changes made to barriers to access within the built
environment, the selectivity and discrimination towards disabled people’s mobility could well
continue (Goldsmith, 1997). However, the literature agrees that creating access for disabled
people in response to Part III of the DDA and Part M of the Building Regulations should ensure
that the built environment becomes more socially inclusive. Changes enabling access to public
buildings, cafés, shops and leisure facilities will also benefit the increasingly ageing population,
as well as parents with babies and young children, and those with temporary mobility problems.
However, if space within public access buildings is set to become more accessible and
inclusive, the same cannot be said of the space between buildings. The Department for
Transport has issued extensive guidance on best practice on accessible pedestrian and transport
infrastructure for disabled people, that provides information on a variety of issues including
human factors and design, the pedestrian environment, the use of tactile paving, the design of
car parking spaces, bus stops, taxi ranks, signage, lighting and information (see, for example,
Oxley, 2002). Local authorities are encouraged to prepare local transport plans and walking
strategies, and to designate ‘home zones’, but these guidelines do not have any legal status.
Where large scale urban regeneration projects are implemented, the pedestrian environment
may be considered holistically and inclusively but, in the case of the vast majority of ordinary
town centre environments, interest in and responsibility for accessibility stops at the boundary
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of each site and no one is responsible for the overall integration of the urban realm. This means
that for many disabled people who rely on inclusively-designed public transport and accessible
pedestrian networks to negotiate the city centre, the objective of ‘seamless travel’ will not be
accomplished by the new legislation. Accessible buildings will have limited scope to bring
about an inclusive society if they cannot be reached because the design of the public urban
The ‘transport chain’ employs the metaphor of a chain to illustrate how the separate parts of a
whole journey can be conceptually linked together into a chain that illustrates the ideal of
‘seamless travel’ where every journey can be made effortlessly without breaks or ruptures.
Atkins (2001) suggests that thinking of a journey this way allows for movement to be
considered as a linked whole, rather than as a set of discrete operations. The transport chain
suggests a linear movement, and reflects a ‘one size fits all’ model of thinking that does not
take into account the flexibility of many people’s lives. A chain is also a metaphor for a
restraint, an object that impedes freedom, especially the freedom to roam. The 1999 report
‘From Exclusion to Inclusion’ by the Disability Rights Task Force (DRTF) has stated that “for
all disabled people to be able to travel, and to travel with confidence, all aspects of the transport
chain must be accessible”. However, Atkins (2001) has noted that “a transport chain is only as
strong as its weakest link” and Hesketh (2002) has pointed out that, in reality, very few of the
‘links’ are truly accessible and so many journeys for mobility impaired people fail.
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Atkins has suggested the transport chain could be extended beyond transportation planning to
include matters such as urban planning and design. This would address the issue of a more
inclusive urban public realm. However, Bichard et al, (2004) have pointed out that a key
missing link in the transport chain that is seldom considered by urban designers is the provision
of adequate ‘away from home toilets’ as, without these essential facilities, most people are
limited to being away from home for just a couple of hours at a time. The alternative metaphor
of a leash, as in ‘the bladder’s leash’ (Kitchin and Law, 2001) has been used to describe how
the mobility of people with disabilities is restricted within the urban environment by the
absence of accessible public toilets in city centres. Because of this human need to ‘spend a
penny’, a very intimate, domestic function insinuates itself into the public space of the city. It is
a need that is rarely spoken about in public, or if it is debated the topic is addressed with a
mixture of humour and embarrassment, which is why the design of ‘away from home’ toilets
may present a paradigm case that tests society’s willingness to embrace a more socially
Although omitted from the transport chain, the provision of public toilets could be considered
an essential link within this chain. Currently, public toilets are provided in many bus stations,
although provision on bus routes is negligible. Similarly most central railway stations have
toilet provision, whilst smaller stations have had facilities closed (Greed, 2003). There is little
or no provision on London’s Underground network, the lack of which has been cited as one of
the principal barriers to accessing the Underground for older and mobility impaired people (see
Atkins, 2001, pp. 3-10 & 4-9). Whilst the paucity of suitable provision in the wider
27
environment is noted by Barker et al (1995), Oxley (2002) and Kitchen & Law (2001) as a
major concern for older and disabled people, there is no current policy aimed at addressing
these concerns.
Most ‘normal’ public toilet provision is not well designed, and may disadvantage or embarrass
many potential able-bodied users. Ordinary mainstream toilets are therefore far from inclusive.
On the contrary, they represent a key site within the built environment of architectural
disability. A proportion of all men and boys using urinals will be inconvenienced by the fact
that the bowl is not set at a convenient height for them. Many young girls find that the WC pans
and the wash hand basins in the female toilets are too high for comfort. Wash hand basins are
usually set too low for a proportion of all standing people comfortably to use them. Toilet seats
are sometimes too low for the convenience of people who suffer from a back, knee or a hip
problem. People who are ambulant disabled would benefit from grab rails to help steady them,
Usually, toilet facilities are provided on an equal basis for men and women, yet the relevant
research suggests that women take twice as long as men to use the facility. Women are
therefore obliged to queue. Usually equal areas are allocated male and female toilets, but
because male urinals take up less space than a WC cubicle, the number of facilities provided
for men tends to be greater. This gender discrimination may not have been challenged because
women are largely unaware of the number of public facilities (particularly urinals) that are
28
Researchers (Goldsmith, 1976, 1997; Greed, 2003) have consistently pointed to a range of
design issues in respect of mainstream public toilet provision that differentially adversely affect
women, including the (minimal) size and proportions of the average public toilet compartment,
coupled to the fact that the clothing women wear is more prone to contamination and the
requirement to accommodate a sanitary waste disposal bin in each cubicle reduces its usable
space. Other people who are particularly disadvantaged by current standards are pushchair
users, who often have to choose between leaving children outside in the pushchair or folding
the pushchair and carrying both it and the children into the WC compartment. Goldsmith found
that fewer than one in ten were prepared to risk the first option and he pointed out that the
second is extremely inconvenient. For Goldsmith, therefore, the design of public toilets
encapsulates broader issues of discrimination and justice within the built environment.
The situation is even worse in respect of disabled people. Inadequate access to public buildings
may be inconvenient for disabled people but, as Goldsmith (1976) has pointed out, “at public
lavatories this could induce a crisis”. He has further observed that, “among disabled people, the
accessibility of public lavatories is of greater importance than for any other building type”,
(p.356). Part III of the DDA is destined to have an effect on public toilet provision, as access to
and the design of such facilities will have to be reconsidered. Already the numbers of public
toilets show a decrease in the available facilities, with an estimated 40% of on-street toilets
having closed over the last decade (Greed, 2003). The current number of public toilets available
nationally totals approximately 10,000; of these 3500 have access for people with disabilities,
whilst baby changing facilities are provided in 1300 facilities (BTA, 2000).
29
Paradoxically, the implementation of Part III of the DDA may exacerbate public toilet closures.
Many older facilities were originally located below or above ground level so as to minimise
their prominence within the urban fabric. Other premises at ground level may be costly to
discriminatory. Faced with this dilemma, some public sector providers have already opted to
close all their facilities, thereby not discriminating against anyone but disadvantaging everyone.
Other providers have supplemented their ordinary provision by an accessible automatic public
convenience (APC) in the hope of discharging their obligations under the terms of the DDA,
but these are unpopular with the general public and their design is such as to exclude many
disabled people. This may satisfy the letter of the law but it is not in the spirit of the legislation.
At the same time, purveyors of goods and services to the public who provide a WC for the
convenience of their customers will soon have to ensure that disabled customers are also
catered for in this respect. This could bring about a transfer in responsibility for ‘away from
home’ toilet provision from the local authorities to the private sector. Women and disabled
people already rely on a ‘mental map’ of customer toilets in department stores, supermarkets
and shopping centres that afford them privacy, comfort, cleanliness, convenience and dignity.
toilets, provided and maintained by city centre businesses, after October 2004. However, in
practice, some providers have already adopted a policy of locking their facilities in order to
30
Recent research in Clerkenwell, an up-and-coming cultural quarter in the very heart of London
(EPSRC, 2004) revealed that the majority of pubs, clubs, restaurants and galleries were
unaware of the impending access legislation. A small minority had attempted to alter their
premises to remove barriers to access and provide a more accessible environment, but even
where this had occurred and the management claimed to have an accessible toilet on the
premises, more often than not this was not suitable for wheelchair users or other disabled
people. Despite the fact that there is a wealth of technical guidance on how to design and equip
an accessible toilet, including the advice contained in BS8300 and the Building Regulations,
most of the examples visited during the course of the research were badly designed or
downright unusable. Even though the provision was well-intentioned, design errors and
mistakes in the fitting out of the WC compartment compromised its suitability for disabled
users. The authors of the CAE/RIBA ‘Good Loo Design Guide’ (2004) believe this is because
designers and service providers simply do not understand how disabled people actually use a
unisex or other accessible toilet and what its specification is intended to achieve.
The specifications for the unisex corner and unisex peninsular WC compartments in BS8300
and Part M of the Building Regulations are intended to cater for the needs of wheelchair users
(row 6 of Goldsmith’s universal design pyramid). The technical specification for this user
group is critical in determining the accessibility and usability of the WC. Not only must every
item shown in Figure 7 above be provided, these must be the correct fixtures and fittings and
they must be located in exactly the right place. The design is therefore in the top level of
Benktzon’s design pyramid. In this sense, the BS8300 accessible WC is a tailored product but,
following accepted inclusive design principles, it can be justified on the grounds that everyone
31
occupying the lower tiers of the design pyramid will also be included. The irony, then, is that
they are not! Originally conceived of as a pragmatic, ‘special needs’ solution to the needs of
Anecdotally, it has been suggested that some wheelchair users react with hostility to the use of
‘their’ facility by people with ‘invisible disabilities’. Some providers have combined a baby
changing facility with the accessible WC and, particularly where it is the only adult and baby
room, this has also proved a source of discontent among some disabled users (though others
point out that disabled users may also need to change a baby). Paradoxically, an unintended
consequence of inclusively framed legislation is that the accessible WC has emerged as a hotly
contested space among the stakeholders in the disability arena, encapsulating issues of
For example, we are now in a position where many accessible toilets can only be used by
people in possession of a special RADAR (Royal Association for Disability and Rehabilitation)
key. The ‘key scheme’ was originally introduced in 1979 to allow local disabled people to
access a purpose-designed unisex public toilet, which, because it was locked, would not be a
target for vandalism. It was controversial from the outset because it could not be guaranteed
that every disabled person arriving at the facility would have a key. Meanwhile, providing a
‘disabled toilet’ somewhere in the town centre meant that ordinary public toilet facilities need
not be universally accessible, a determining factor in today’s dearth of public toilet facilities.
32
A recent court ruling has indicated that providers who want to lock their accessible toilet
should join the RADAR scheme, so that disabled customers will not be discriminated against
by having to ask for a key, but this does not resolve the difficulties of the many people with
disabilities who are not members of the RADAR scheme. . As Greed has observed, “locking
might ‘protect’ the toilets but it makes them doubly inaccessible for all”, (Greed, 2003, p.160).
Meanwhile, RADAR keys are widely available to people who access the facilities for antisocial
purposes, thus defeating the original intention behind locking the accessible compartment,
The origin of the ‘unisex accessible toilet’ in the ‘special needs’ approach to design also
accounts for the fact that, tailored as it is to the needs of wheelchair users, the BS8300
compartment cannot be relied upon to cater for all other disabled users. For example, some
disabled people prefer to use a ‘unisex’ compartment, set apart from the male and female
facilities for the general public. This is because they can then be accompanied to the toilet
without embarrassment by a carer of the opposite gender. Other disabled people feel that
having to use a ‘unisex’ compartment is itself stigmatising and embarrassing, and they would
much prefer it if the ordinary facilities for their gender were designed so as to accommodate
their requirements. In a recent critique of the unisex accessible toilet, Goldsmith (1997, p.183)
suggested that, “the idea that that it could be right for every disabled person was always
absurd”, adding that, when the concept was first introduced, disabled rights activists were so
keen to promote it that the (then) BS5810 toilet (an earlier specification to BS8300) became an
icon as, “if disabled people were to have rights, a right they should be entitled to was the
33
a truly inclusive approach to design, which would ensure that the facilities used by ordinary
The rigidity with which gender separation is currently enforced within ordinary mainstream
toilet facilities means that it is not possible for a man or woman to assist their partner to visit
the toilet without suffering opprobrium. As was the case with the RADAR key scheme,
slackening the bounds of social convention opens the door to abuse. In the case of whether or
not to lock the accessible toilet, the fear was of vandalism or ‘misuse’ by non-disabled people.
In this instance, strict gender separation is maintained to deter sexual harassment when
engaging in the intimate activity of using the loo in what is, to all intents and purposes, a public
space where everyone else is a stranger. In neither of these cases is there an optimal design
solution. Compromise between the needs of different users is not possible and something has to
give.
A third example from current research (EPSRC, 2004) will serve as a further illustration of how
complex and multi-faceted the design of a simple toilet has become. Some profoundly impaired
people take longer to use the WC; up to half an hour may be needed if the visit involves
removing and replacing complex body bracing. The length of time that the accessible WC
needs to be occupied can prove problematic for other potential users who are forced to queue,
particularly if their impairment requires them to visit the toilet urgently and regularly, as would
be the case for someone with a urostomy. One solution that is acceptable to disabled users
would be to fit a ‘timer’ to the WC to indicate how long it will be occupied. However, there is a
danger that people wanting to occupy the compartment for antisocial purposes would also make
34
use of the timer. The preferred solution for those who provide and police away from home
toilets is that if a disabled person needs longer, they should put a temporary notice to that effect
on the outside of the toilet door. Clearly this is not an inclusive solution, as most toilet users
In this, as in all the previous examples, the effectiveness of inclusive design raises divisive
social issues. In this last illustration a potentially useful innovation is unlikely to be adopted by
manufacturers because of its potential abuse by a small minority (people engaged in drug
taking, prostitution, cottaging and vandalism) who do not use ‘away from home toilets’ as
intended. Wherever possible, the providers of unattended facilities response is to ‘design out
crime’ by ‘target hardening’ their premises, but in so doing they make them unattractive and
inaccessible to everyone else. For example, in order to prevent drug users from injecting
themselves in public toilets, some providers have installed ‘blue’ lights that prevent addicts
from seeing their veins, but this also renders the toilet unusable by some people with impaired
vision and by people with a colostomy or a urostomy, who need high light levels to clean their
stoma. This attempt to deter unlawful use also penalises some disabled people. Perhaps the
ultimate ethical challenge for inclusive design is the issue of whether public toilets should have
a facility for the safe disposal of used needles, which may otherwise be left on the toilet floor
This is the crux of the matter. The inclusive design of an ‘away from home’ toilet superficially
presents itself as a mere technical affair, where successful design can be reduced to a matter of
‘getting the specification right’. In reality, wherever the designer attempts to intervene in the
35
design process, the inclusive design of public toilets unveils fundamental social processes that
not only regulate relationships between different user groups but also cross the boundary
Inclusive design therefore presents both challenges and opportunities for surveying. Building
surveyors will need to be aware of service providers’ obligations in respect of Part III of the
DDA when advising clients who are looking to acquire premises from which to carry out their
business. Members may be called upon to perform access audits, in which case it is important
to draw an inclusive definition of disability that extends to sensory and cognitive impairments
as well as restricted mobility. Valuation surveyors need to be aware of the reduced value of
premises that are not fully accessible and it is they who will have the responsibility of costing
any ‘adjustments’ that might be needed to comply with the law. Estate surveyors who manage
portfolios of properties for property owners will need to advise their clients as to what might
constitute ‘reasonable steps’ with regard to ‘debarriering’ the built environment, and whether it
is the owner of the building or its tenants who is responsible for the work. Surveyors could
become involved in representing the client’s interests in the accessibility of new buildings at
the design stage, perhaps in estimating the likely costs and benefits of inclusive design. In
exercising these and other functions associated with social inclusion, surveyors will need to be
aware of the assumptions and motivations of the principal stakeholders engaged in the decision
making process and the various theoretical models that they could be using to underpin
decision taking.
36
In respect of the urban built environment, the part surveyors might play in achieving ‘seamless
travel’ for people with disabilities initially might appear less obvious, as their principal
professional role is in relation to buildings and their sites. However, one lesson to be learned
from the issue of public toilet provision is that decisions made in one area of the built
environment often have ramifications for other apparently unrelated areas. Thus, the closure of
local authority provision is leading to shift in people’s perceptions about how the ‘need to go’
should be addressed. The DDA will undoubtedly place a greater pressure on businesses that
deal with the general public to provide accessible toilets for customers and visitors. Balancing
the immediate capital costs of a well-designed toilet that meets the needs of disabled users
against the longer term gains that may be achieved through demonstrating a commitment to
As Imrie and Hall suggested earlier, achieving a more accessible built environment might be
accomplished by specifying technical design solutions that meet the requirements of the DDA,
but embracing a more inclusive approach to design has the potential to achieve far more in
terms of social justice and inclusion. They have suggested that making the environment more
accessible for older and disabled people will require a change in social attitudes, values and
practices and, in this respect, the design professions have the necessary knowledge, skills and
understanding to lead the way. This far, inclusive design of an accessible urban environment
has been presented as an issue of social justice, but it is also a matter of economic
competitiveness. By 2020, there will be 100 million older people in Europe (Roe, 2001),
representing a massive ‘grey marketplace’, and disabled consumers are also an active and
increasingly vocal market sector. Inclusive design is therefore a ‘win-win’ situation for service
37
providers and built environment professionals alike, in which profitability goes hand in hand
opportunity to contribute to a better, more inclusive built environment and by so doing to bring
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