handicapped access

Functional Aesthetics
Designing swimming pools and spas for people with disabilities is a special calling for watershapers:  The process gets you involved with sets of capabilities and physical limitations that force you to think beyond the usual; it also puts you in gut-level contact with the needs of those who crave involvement with water and its potential to ease pain, make aquatic exercise possible and, via simple buoyancy, make gravity less of
2015/12.1, December 2 — Access Assistance, Distant Projects, Duck Ponds and more
THE ESSENTIAL E-NEWSLETTER FOR WATERSHAPE DESIGNERS, ENGINEERS AND BUILDERS December 2, 2015 www.watershapes.com FEATURE ARTICLE…
LifeGuard Lift Offers Residential Pool Access
LifeGuard Lift (Eaton Rapids, MI) has introduced a line of pool lifts designed for residential…
Inground Pool Lifts from Aquatic Access
Aquatic Access (Louisville, KY) makes the IGAT-180, a lift that provides easy access to and…
2014/4.2, April 23 — An Artist’s Legacy, Safe Poolside Lighting, Healing Waters and more
April 23, 2014 www.watershapes.com ESSENTIAL Organic Artistry To see what happens when a watershape is…
Designing for Access
This video is a great example of the phenomenon known as "mission creep":  We started out with a discussion of what's involved in making a residential swimming pool and spa accessible to someone who uses a wheelchair - a good and worthy subject on its own - but the project so perfectly illustrates a couple of additional points that we kept the camera rolling. The video covers one specific ramp in fine detail, but I want to stress two more general points about planning for wheelchair access:  First, a properly sloped ramp
Designing for Access
This video is a great example of the phenomenon known as "mission creep":  We started out with a discussion of what's involved in making a residential swimming pool and spa accessible to someone who uses a wheelchair - a good and worthy subject on its own - but the project so perfectly illustrates a couple of additional points that we kept the camera rolling. The video covers one specific ramp in fine detail, but I want to stress two more general points about planning for wheelchair access:  First, a properly sloped ramp
Test Your Knowledge #29
Swimmer Ian Thorpe Fails toQualify for London Olympics
Public Forms and Functions
These aren't our parents' public pools. Whether run by a city or by a county, these recreational facilities are now subject to a new set of rules in response to evolving consumer demand and the growing popularity of elaborate waterparks.  The inert, rectangular pools of years past - ten or 12 feet deep at one end, three or four feet deep at the other - are fast being replaced by multi-faceted, multi-purpose, quasi-organic forms that appeal to users of all ages and abilities. The new designs incorporate large