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Thank you!Not necessarily. If an adjacent table is provided that is accessible I do not require a lowered bar section. Attaching an article on the subject. This is an IBC article, so FL may be different, or have a different take on the same language. The rub can be the subjective "adjacent" or "nearby" language. My take has been that if it is in the same dining area is counts, but even that can be viewed subjectively.
My understanding is that equivalent facilitation requires that a section of a restaurant bar needs to be at 34", and that a nearby table at that height does not comply. Everyone agree?
A bar is a unique type of seating / restaurant experience.I agree. The accessibility standards in the building codes are nothing more than a codification of the ADA. The ADA is federal non-discrimination legislation. The purpose is to provide equivalent access to goods, services, and facilities to the able-bodied and to the disabled.
Not necessarily. If an adjacent table is provided that is accessible I do not require a lowered bar section. Attaching an article on the subject. This is an IBC article, so FL may be different, or have a different take on the same language. The rub can be the subjective "adjacent" or "nearby" language. My take has been that if it is in the same dining area is counts, but even that can be viewed subjectively.
This has been a long standing difference of opinion issue.....I'm with the seating at the bar camp.....It's surprising and disappointing that Kim would have written that. She should have known better. I would point out that the article dates to 2016 and was based on the 2012 IBC. Kim is still with the ICC -- I wonder if her opinion remains the same today?
This has been a long standing difference of opinion issue.....I'm with the seating at the bar camp.....
While I do respect Kim....the only time I spoke with her we disagreed....That was spring hinges/ fire rating....So am I, and that's how I have always seen it enforced.
I have known Kim Paarlberg for more than 25 years and I respect her highly. That's why I'm so shocked to see her name on an article that goes against this. That article goes completely against the express intent of the ADA.
Nothing is binding….other than a decision from the courts….Off topic - are ICC interpretations of code binding, or merely informative for building officials in the US?
Sifu, thank you for the article by Richard Hunt. I thought it was excellent reading. Showed the ambiguity of the DOJ ADA requirements as applied to bar seating. I think better to be safe and provide that drop down counter long enough for two wheelchair users to fit.Not necessarily. If an adjacent table is provided that is accessible I do not require a lowered bar section. Attaching an article on the subject. This is an IBC article, so FL may be different, or have a different take on the same language. The rub can be the subjective "adjacent" or "nearby" language. My take has been that if it is in the same dining area is counts, but even that can be viewed subjectively.
Where seating or standing space at fixed or built-in tables, counters or work surfaces is provided in accessible spaces, at least 5 percent of the seating and standing spaces, but not less than one, shall be accessible.
I like that....A common situation in many crowded restaurants is for the host to say (for example): “We’ll have a table available in 30 minutes but in the meanwhile you are free to sit at the bar.”
This statement has created two types and two areas of restaurant experiences.
So a person in a wheelchair goes to the bar, there’s no 34” high counter, and the adjacent table is of course occupied. The wheelchair user has to go back to the foyer while others can enjoy a drink at the bar.
Discrimination?
That is a sound decision, better to do it if you can. Users are certainly free to use it or not, their choice. Like I say about so many things....better to have it and not need it, then to need it and not have it. I just don't think the code is clear enough to compel it in all cases. The article I provided spells it out rather well.Sifu, thank you for the article by Richard Hunt. I thought it was excellent reading. Showed the ambiguity of the DOJ ADA requirements as applied to bar seating. I think better to be safe and provide that drop down counter long enough for two wheelchair users to fit.
Yes, this has been a debate for some time, and I understand both sides of the debate. Attaching another article that reflects a couple of things I have considered on the issue, and that reinforces the lack of clarity on the issue. It seems (as this article contends) that this could easily have been cleared up, and it that it may have been considered when written, so I think maybe they intended to provide flexibility in the administration of the requirement. I have not seen any official interpretation of this issue from ANSI, ICC, or the ADA.
Off topic - are ICC interpretations of code binding, or merely informative for building officials in the US?
Phil B - here is a response from the US Access Board the federal agency that writes the ADA standards for the DOJ to enforce. I hope this helps. Jean TessmerMy understanding is that equivalent facilitation requires that a section of a restaurant bar needs to be at 34", and that a nearby table at that height does not comply. Everyone agree?