• Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    I’m happy to read about areas that are actually accessible. I don’t use a wheelchair or walker, but I’m very aware of the need to have accessible infrastructure. I can say without a shadow of a doubt that my municipality, and the several nearby, do NOT have accessible trails for people to enjoy the outdoors.

    We’re talking complete design failure, from tall curbs at entrances/exits of trails, to dangerous slopes on the trails themselves.

    Then you have sections that are intentionally narrowed to prevent cars and motorcycles from entering, but they are designed in a way where someone in a wheelchair couldn’t possibly fit through them, or manoeuvre through them without getting tangled.

    These same deficiencies are experienced by able-bodied people who might be using a trike or child trailer with their bike, so it affects a large number of users along these trail systems.

    Even worse are trails where there appear to be SPEED BUMPS, intentionally set, but for whom?? To slow down a speeding person in a wheelchair? To trip up someone using a walker? To slow down cyclists instead of cars?

    Jesus Christ, design infrastructure for humans, not machines.