jkellerfsu
Civil/Environmental
- Dec 7, 2005
- 13
I have been working over the past few years developing ADA standards within the right-of-way. I am curious to get a feel for how anyone (IF ANYONE) interprets the 12:1 runnng slope for a pedestrian curb ramp. MD SHA and The City of Baltimore have interpreted "12:1 requirement" to mean "a change in elevation over distance".
Given that we are constricted within limited ROW (especially in urban areas) we do not interpret 12:1 to necessarily absolutely equal 8.33% (don't gasp!), our curb ramp length is governed by the height of the curb (6" curb yeilds a 6' ramp)
The access board seems to be favoring our interpretation. Does anyone else have the same feeling? I have recently dealt with a "Department of Justice certified Architect" who verifies compliant ramps all over the country - not one municipality has proposed this argument.
Given that we are constricted within limited ROW (especially in urban areas) we do not interpret 12:1 to necessarily absolutely equal 8.33% (don't gasp!), our curb ramp length is governed by the height of the curb (6" curb yeilds a 6' ramp)
The access board seems to be favoring our interpretation. Does anyone else have the same feeling? I have recently dealt with a "Department of Justice certified Architect" who verifies compliant ramps all over the country - not one municipality has proposed this argument.