ADA Guidelines /
Documents & Fair Housing Act 1999:
Stay up-to-date and ensure
compliance with the ADA Guidelines / Documents and Fair Housing Act 1999.
Documents Include:
- Public Law 100-430, Fair Housing Amendments Act
- Public Law 101-336, Americans with Disabilities Act
- Uniform Federal Accessibility Standards (UFAS, 1998)
- Minimum Guidelines & Requirements for Accessible Design (Architectural
and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, 1999)
- Fair Housing (HUD, 1999)
- Non-discrimination on the Basis of Disability in State and Local Gov't
Services (Dept. of Justice, 1999)
- Non-discrimination on the Basis of Disability by Public Accommodations and
in Commercial Facilities (Dept. of Justice, 1999)
- ADA Accessibility Guidelines for Buildings and Facilities (ADAAG)
ADA & ABA Handbook -
Accessibility Guidelines for Buildings and Facilities:
The purpose of this book is
to aid in finding information on and applying ADA/ABA Accessibility Guidelines.
It is divided into two parts: the ADA Accessibility Guidelines and the ABA
Accessibility Guidelines for Federal Applications. 304 pp.
ADA Accessibility Guidelines are located from pages 5 through 71;
ADA Chapter 1 (code numbers 101 through 106) contains an overview of the
application and administration. ADA Chapter 2 (code numbers 201 through 243)
Contains both the scoping requirements and the related technical provisions for
components of a building or facility. All like subjects have been grouped
together by chapter regardless of code number.
ABA Accesibility Guidelines are located from pages 72 through 140;
ABA Chapter 1 (code numbers F101, through F106) contains an overview of the
application and administration. ABA Chapter 2 (code numbers F201 through F243)
contains both the scoping requirements and the related technical provisions for
components of a building or facility.
The following is an explanation of the ADA/ABA Accessibility Guidelines
numbering systems:
Part 1: ADA Application and Scoping
- 100 is application and administration
- 200 is scoping requirements
Part 2: ABA Application and Scoping (numbers here are preceded by an
"F")
- F100 is application and Administration
- F200 is scoping requirements
And Both Codes use the same Technical Sections
- 300 is building blocks
- 400 is accessible routes
- 500 is general site and building elements
- 600 is plumbing elements and facilities
- 700 is communication elements and features
- 800 is special rooms, spaces and elements
- 900 is built-in elements
- 1000 is recreation facilities
ADA & ABA Handbook - Accessibility Guidelines for Buildings and
Facilities - Table of Contents:
- ADA Application and Administration
- ADA Scoping Requirements
- ABA Application and Administration
- ABA Scoping Requirements
- Building Blocks
- Accessible Routes
- General Site and Building Elements
- Plumbing Elements and Facilities
- Communication Elements and features
- Special Rooms, Spaces and Elements
- Built-In Elements
- Recreation Facilities
- List of Figures
- Index
ICC/ANSI A117.1-2003
Standard on Accessible and Usable Buildings and Facilities:
The specifications in the
2003 ANSI Standard make sites, facilities, buildings and elements accessible to
and usable by people with such physical disabilities as the inability to walk,
difficulty walking, reliance on walking aids, blindness and visual impairment,
deafness and hearing impairment, incoordination, reaching and manipulation
disabilities, lack of stamina, difficulty interpreting and reacting to sensory
information, and extremes of physical size. The intent of the ICC/ANSI
A117.1-2003 standard is to allow a person with physical disability to
independently get to, enter, and use a site, facility, building, or element.
The previous edition was the 1998 edition. New to the 2003 edition are
criteria for elements and fixtures primarily for children's use; enhanced reach
range, criteria; transportation facilities; additional provisions for assembly
areas; and an addition and rearrangement for accessible dwelling and sleeping
units. These new criteria are intended to provide a level of coordination
between the accessible provisions of this standard and the Fair Housing
Accessibility Guidelines (ADAAG).
The ICC/ANSI A117.1-2003 Standard is intended for adoption by government
agencies and by organizations setting model codes to achieve uniformity in the
technical design criteria in building codes and other regulations.