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Seeing squares

Japan’s tenji blocks, or yellow tactile paving, undergo continuous innovation to guide the visually impaired.

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FROM Tokyo’s famous Shibuya crossing to the remotest Okinawan island, Japan’s streets have one thing in common: ‘tenji blocks’, yellow textured paving squares to aid people with visual impairment­s.

The tactile paving was invented in Japan more than 50 years ago to help those with visual impairment­s move smoothly and safely around urban environmen­ts.

And they’ve gone global over the years, becoming a familiar sight in cities from London to Sydney.

The tiles, typically found at railway station platforms, pedestrian crossings, and in front of public buildings, are usually yellow, which is often said to be the easiest colour for the visually impaired to see.

They come in two types: squares with long raised parallel strips tell pedestrian­s they can proceed safely and keep them following the road, while those with raised bumps indicate a change of direction or stopping point like an entrance, or a possible danger like a platform edge, staircase or traffic light.

“Walking along the tactile paving reassures me that it is safe to walk there,” Toyoharu Yoshiizumi, executive member of the Japan Federation of the Visually Impaired, told AFP.

Yoshiizumi, who lost his sight at age 12, commutes about 40 minutes every day, guided by tenji blocks – named after the Japanese word for braille.

“Roads are never straight and are often curved or twisted, and thanks to the guide blocks, I feel safe because I know I’m walking along the streets.”

The now-ubiquitous blocks were the brainchild of local inventor Seiichi Miyake from western Japan’s Okayama.

After witnessing a blind person with a cane almost getting hit by a car at an intersecti­on, Miyake decided to devote himself to inventing something to keep visually impaired pedestrian­s safe.

QR code innovation­s

In 1967, Japan’s first tenji blocks were donated for a crossing near a school for the blind in Okayama.

Miyake’s brother helped him develop the tenji blocks and later said he would “never forget the emotional moment” when the tiles were first put to the test by a pedestrian.

It would take another three years for the tiles to reach the first district in Tokyo, and over time they went global, becoming so wellknown that they featured as an animated Google Doodle in 2019.

And tenji block innovation continues today.

While the blocks help keep pedestrian­s safe and on track, they don’t give much more informatio­n, including which direction a person is headed.

But an app launched this year aims to address that, with QR codes pasted onto blocks in several Tokyo stations, which pedestrian­s can scan for spoken informatio­n including directions and distance to their destinatio­n.

“A lot of informatio­n comes from vision but visually impaired people don’t have access to that,” said Yuichi Konishi, chairman of LINKX, which developed the app.

“We wanted to do something about it with technology.”

With the app, users can choose destinatio­ns such as specific exits, toilets and train cars. So far QR codes are available at nine Tokyo metro stations and the company hopes to see the project expand.

A lot can be done

Tenji blocks alone are not always enough to keep people safe. Last year, a visually impaired man fell onto the train tracks at a Tokyo station and was hit by a train despite the blocks on the platform.

Increasing­ly though, platforms feature doors that open only when a train is in the station. Other safety measures in Tokyo include crosswalk sounds that tell people when to cross, and recordings that announce the start or end of an escalator.

Yoshiizumi said those with visual impairment­s need infrastruc­ture but also support from others. “As far as awareness is concerned, I find that openness towards people with disabiliti­es has increased considerab­ly,” he said.

“When I walk through a station, station employees of course speak to me, but nowadays I very often hear other passengers offering their help to guide me.” And he’s hopeful that the Tokyo Paralympic­s, which has ended, will help improve inclusion for people with disabiliti­es. “People think, ‘oh you can’t do this or do that because of disabiliti­es’. I hope that watching the Paralympic Games will change their perception­s so that they will understand that we can do a lot of things,” he said.

“I think it would make the world a better place for people with disabiliti­es.”

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 ??  ?? tenji blocks seen inside the olympic Stadium in tokyo. — photos: afp
tenji blocks seen inside the olympic Stadium in tokyo. — photos: afp

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