Author-Adarsh Ajaikumar
Envisage a world where you go to a lush and spacious park with a soothing pleasant atmosphere and here you see people with very different backgrounds enjoying this fabulous park. In this place you can hear different languages, see people from different ethnicities, smell the clean air with the freshness of flowers, observe the homeless vs. the wealthy, and see people with various disabilities. What if I told you that such a place exists! And I have had the unique opportunity to experience it! This place is in downtown Chicago, USA.
I have duchenne muscular dystrophy, where I am unable to walk, and at that time I used a mobility scooter. During the summers from around 2010-2017, I stayed here. No words could describe the freedom and independence I felt. I could just zoom out the door in my mobility wheelchair alone and go wherever I please. So many options to choose from such as reading a book at the lakeside, zooming around the many parks, visiting museums, having a coffee, and the list can go on. All this in the vicinity for me to travel with enough battery in my scooter. I also had the option to take an accessible bus or cab.
Are you worried about me? How can I go alone everywhere? What if there is an obstacle on the road you can’t cross? What if I am blocked by a door? Is it safe? What if you get lost? So many doubts and questions about my safety, but thanks to assistive technology in built environments, we can put these concerned questions to rest. To give a few examples of assistive technology I have used are as follows:
- Use of ramps at all road crossings and smooth sidewalks
- Use of hydraulic lifts to enter some buildings with a few steps or inside museums.
- Use of wheelchair accessible buttons to open doors to entrances of all buildings.
- Pull out ramps in cabs and hydraulic lifts in buses.