Gulf News

Disabled-friendly code in Dubai

From this year new public spaces must fulfil requiremen­ts of the code

- BY PAUL CROMPTON

From this year, many new public spaces must fulfil a new emirate-wide, disabled-friendly code in line with the ‘My Community — A City for Everyone’ project.

At the same time, many older buildings must be retro-fitted to fulfil the requiremen­ts of the code.

The new rules are laid out in a booklet called the Dubai Universal Design Code. Everything from the thickness of handrails (30mm) to the minimum distance of accessible toilets in public buildings (150 metres) is mentioned. They apply to transport facilities, hospitals and clinics, schools, colleges, mosques, hotels, tourist attraction­s, and leisure facilities such as art galleries and shopping malls.

The rules are not yet mandatory for residentia­l buildings. Dubai’s Executive Council is working to make public buildings and city facilities friendly for people with disabiliti­es by 2020 — and more accessible for everybody. The Council has already worked with 13 government and semigovern­mental bodies to build facilities — and retro-fit old ones with accessible layouts.

D ubai’s Executive Council is working to make public buildings and city facilities friendly for people with disabiliti­es by 2020 — and more accessible for everybody.

Starting this year, many new public spaces must fulfil a new emirate-wide, disabled-friendly code. And many older buildings must be retrofitte­d to fulfil the requiremen­ts of the code.

The new rules are laid out in a detailed booklet called the Dubai Universal Design Code. Everything from the thickness of handrails (30mm) to the minimum distance of accessible toilets in public buildings (150 metres) is specified, and they apply to transport facilities, hospitals and clinics, schools, colleges, mosques, hotels, tourist attraction­s, and leisure facilities such as art galleries and shopping malls.

The rules are not yet mandatory for residentia­l buildings.

So far, the Dubai Executive Council has worked with 13 government and semi-government­al bodies to build facilities — and retrofit old ones with accessible layouts.

The bodies include the Roads and Transport Authority, Dubai Municipali­ty, Community Developmen­t Authority, Tecom, and the Knowledge and Human Developmen­t Authority. The council has also worked with mega-builder Emaar to make The Dubai Mall, among other places, more disabled friendly.

The project, titled ‘Accessible Environmen­ts for People with Disability based on Universal Design’, is in line with the wider ‘My Community – A City for Everyone’ initiative to transform Dubai into a disabledfr­iendly city by 2020.

The term “universal design,” first coined by a US architect in the 1960s, refers to ideas and principles that make spaces more accessible to older people, and people with or without disabiliti­es.

“[Dubai] has to be accessible even if you had no [disabled people], even if you had zero coming from outside,” said Dr Salem Ali Al Shafei, director of policies and programmes for rights of people with disabiliti­es at the council. “When it comes to accessibil­ity, I think the number [of people with disabiliti­es in the emirate] is irrelevant.”

Universal design, Al Shafei added, does not address the needs of people with obvious disabiliti­es only. “It actually makes life easier for everybody, including mothers with children, if you are pulling a luggage with wheels behind you, if you are a bit older and a bit slow. Universal accessibil­ity makes accessibil­ity easy [for everyone], including people with disabiliti­es.”

An earlier studying phase of the project, which began in 2014, looked at successful examples of accessibil­ity-friendly planning in the US, Canada and Singapore, among other countries.

Previously, most Dubai buildings were built on a mix of sometimes contradict­ory codes from other countries. But with the new, Dubai-specific code, Al Shafei believes that the city will see a noticeable change for the better by 2020.

The council has already trained several dozen engineers, designers and infrastruc­ture maintenanc­e staff working in the multiple government bodies.

“If we can do 80 per cent, even if we can do 70 per cent [of our goals], can you imagine the positive impact this can have on people’s lives?” Al Shafei said. “It’s huge.”

“The ultimate goal is that people can go up to you and say, thank you, our lives are better.”

“We can go to school, we can go to hospitals, we can go to movies, we can go to the beach, we can go to prayer. We want to see that happening, we want to hear that.”

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