Archive for the ‘mobility’ category

Handicap Bathroom Design

September 15, 2009

Handicap bathroom design is something I have had a hand in lately with my nephew’s place getting some cosmetic work done and that included his specially adapted bathroom. Now, I know folks are often curious to know what designing a bathroom for a person with disabilities entails and for that matter what goes into one, so I’ll write a little on that and hopefully give you a better understanding of what it entails.

OK, the first thing you have to bear in mind when putting together a working design for a handicap-friendly bathroom remodeling project is the layout and that means you need to leave plenty of space for a wheelchair user to get around in there. They have to able to get in, turn around and get out as well as use the facilities without unduly needing to lean over stuff or stretch to reach anything.

If that makes sense, then the rest of this should all fall into place.

You need to start with things that cannot easily be moved, such as waste water pipes, hot and cold water inlets, electrical sockets etc. Those are things that are best worked with where they are if you can. So if you have a drainage point for a shower and a toilet that are far enough away from each other to allow a full sized handicap shower stall to be installed, that’s great. if not, you really cannot compromise on that one, as its no good installing a shower unit that a wheelchair user can’t use!

Same goes for the handicap toilet. It has to be in a place that is easy to get to and to transfer to and from a wheelchair using handrails fitted securely to the walls. So if it means having to move something major, like a water waste pipe, then you’ll probably find it easier to move the outlet for the shower than the toilet, which is a job you really do not want to undertake unless it is absolutely necessary!

Think about where you’ll install the wash basin or vanity unit too, as it’ll require water inlets and outlets too, although these are not too difficult to move if needs be.

When installing faucets, they had better be specially adapted ones so that a person with very little strength in their hands can still easily operate them. No point fitting a beautiful looking chrome mixing faucet that you can’t turn on or off.

Floor space is important of course, as a wheelchair needs to be able to get around in there and the handicap shower stall needs to be large enough to accommodate a wheelchair and handicap shower seat too. Hand rails need to be anywhere a person is likely to need to move around, for instance getting out of a wheelchair and sitting in a shower seat. Think about the best placement and for heaven’s sake if the handicapped person who is gonna use the facility is there, ask them where they want them!

Ensuring all the furniture is at the correct height is important as well, because a person in a wheelchair who wants to wash their hands will want to do so while sitting, for obvious reasons! Make sure they can get the chair under the wash basin so they don’t have to reach too far over to use the faucets.

Well, that’s about most of the main points about getting handicap bathroom design as right as you can. Smaller things like towel rails and stuff should all follow the same common sense placement as the furniture for height and distance and as long as you also fit a non-slip floor surface, you’ll have a pretty satisfied user.

That’s it for this post, so I’ll be back again soon.

Edwyn Prose

Stair Chair Lifts

July 16, 2009

You know, plenty of folks who are getting along in years and those with disabilities, as my last post made reference to, have a tough time getting up and down the stairs in their homes. My own parents had just that problem until we had a stair chair lift fitted to their main stairway.

The transformation was incredible. The pair of them went from just sitting around dejected and waiting for something to happen to being active and happy again. It was all down to the sudden freedom they once more enjoyed in their own home. That’s because long before we had the stair chair lift fitted, they had simply lost interest in many things simply because they couldn’t easily get around the house.

It saddens me to say that they had taken to sleeping downstairs in their sitting room because it had actually become too painful to climb the stairs to go to bed in their beloved bedroom which looked out over the beautiful grassy fields of the golf course opposite. Of course, they were too proud to tell anyone about it so the first I knew was on a particular visit to their home where I’d stayed on later than planned and asked to stay over night. Then the truth came out and the next day I went and did something about it.

You know, I found a good local stair lift company and the guys came out that day to take measurements. The installers came a day later with all the equipment and fitted it there and then. Sure, it took the day to get it all correctly installed and there was some mess, but it was all cleared up soon enough and the guys did a real professional job.

It was up and running by the evening and at first my mother was a little wary of it but she soon got the hang of it and was cruising up and down like a pro!

My father took to it straight away too and they were soon fighting over who got to ride it first!

Now that’s the kind of happy ending I like to see! So if you have a person with disabilities in the family or parents or loved ones who are keeping quiet about their ability to get around their own homes, for want of a good stair chair lift you can transform their lives for the better in one fell swoop!

Edwyn Prose