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2007-03-08 06:55:59 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Travel United States Other - United States

2 answers

In the U.S. there are certain standards that must be met, and most public buildings are accessible. Without visiting every city in the U.S. it would be hard to say which is most accessible or, as I would put it, most wheelchair friendly.

Accessible does not necessarily mean conveniently so, as anyone in a wheelchair can attest to. Besides buildings where the "accessibility" is service elevator or a door in the back, there are far too many (i.e.) most stores and many service oriented companies where the aisles just barely meet the regulations, then they stack merchandise so that you cannot get a wheelchair through them. Clothing racks are even worse!

Anyway ... off my soapbox .... I found a link that may interest you and may answer your question.
http://www.accesstravelcenter.com/ac_cit.html

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2007-03-11 17:59:58 · answer #1 · answered by Pichi 7 · 0 0

very confusing point. search at google. that can help!

2014-12-04 19:43:16 · answer #2 · answered by gale 2 · 0 0

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