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Designing apartment access for young wheelchair users with MS

estes

Member
Joined
May 22, 2025
Messages
7
I'm putting together a layout plan for a mid-rise building focused on younger adults living with MS. I'd like to connect with anyone who uses a wheelchair (you don't need to be elderly) and can share insights on everyday mobility challenges especially around kitchen setups and bathroom access. Any firsthand experiences or must-haves would help me make the design actually useful.
 
I don't use a wheelchair but I've worked on a similar residential project for people with varying mobility needs a while back.
We found that talking directly to residents was invaluable, especially for things you might not immediately consider from a design perspective, so I appreciate your focus on getting firsthand experience!
In that project I mentioned, they requested pull-out pantry shelves and lower countertop sections for prep work.
In bathrooms, we designed a roll-in shower with a built-in bench and grab bars that could be easily relocated.
I hope more members share their insights here, and good luck!
 
If you're designing for wheelchair users and relying solely on guesswork or textbook "accessibility," you're setting folks up to struggle....talk to real users or you're just building pretty prisons
 
Lower countertops, pull out shelves, and open space for turning make a huge difference. In bathrooms, roll in showers, grab bars, and reachable controls really help.
 
@estes this is a really thoughtful approach. Lower counters, pull-out shelves, and open floor space for turning are huge, and roll-in showers with grab bars make bathrooms far more functional. Definitely talk to users whenever you can. They’ll highlight things you wouldn’t think of from textbooks alone.
 
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