J. Edward Swan II

The Application of Virtual Wheelchair Simulation to the Determination of Environmental Accessibility and Standards Compliance in Architectural Design

Wayne Carlson, J. Edward Swan II, Don Stredney, and Beth Blostein. The Application of Virtual Wheelchair Simulation to the Determination of Environmental Accessibility and Standards Compliance in Architectural Design. In J.W. Brahan, editor, Proceedings of the Symposium on Computers & Innovative Architectural Design, The 7th International Conference on Systems Research, Informatics & Cybernetics (ICSRIC '94), August 1994.

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Abstract

In this paper we describe a system that allows a power wheelchair user to drive through a virtual architectural environment. The system allows architects and designers to visualize an environment, test the environment for handicapped accessibility, and determine whether the environment meets design standards such as the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. First we describe the system itself, including its hardware and software components and its user interface. Then we discuss architectural and design considerations.

BibTeX

@InCollection{CIAD94-vw, 
  author =      {Wayne Carlson and J. Edward {Swan~II} and Don Stredney and Beth Blostein}, 
  title =       {The Application of Virtual Wheelchair Simulation to the Determination 
                 of Environmental Accessibility and Standards Compliance in 
                 Architectural Design}, 
  booktitle =   {Proceedings of the Symposium on Computers & Innovative 
                 Architectural Design, The 7th International Conference on 
                 Systems Research, Informatics & Cybernetics (ICSRIC '94)}, 
  editor =      {J.W. Brahan}, 
  location =    {Baden-Baden, Germany}, 
  date =        {August 18}, 
  month =       {August}, 
  year =        1994, 
  abstract =    { 
In this paper we describe a system that allows a power wheelchair user to drive 
through a virtual architectural environment. The system allows architects and 
designers to visualize an environment, test the environment for handicapped 
accessibility, and determine whether the environment meets design standards such 
as the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. First we describe the system 
itself, including its hardware and software components and its user 
interface. Then we discuss architectural and design considerations. 
}, 
}