AMERICANS
WITH DISABILITIES ARCHITECTURAL GUIDELINES (ADAAG)
[Back to Index]
The following
information concerning ADA hardware requirements comes from the ADAAG. The
basic hardware requirements are as follows:
- The doorway
must have a minimum clear opening of 32" with the door open 90 degrees,
measured from the face of the door and the opposite stop; 5/8" is allowed
for the latch.
- Thresholds
at doorways shall not exceed 1/2" except for exterior sliding doors, which
is 3/4". Raised thresholds and floor level changes at accessible doorways
shall be beveled with a slope no greater than 1:2.
- Door
hardware such as handles, pulls, latches, locks, and other operating devices
on accessible doors shall have a shape that is easy to grasp with one hand
and does not require tight grasping, tight pinching, or twisting of the
wrist to operate. Lever-operated mechanisms, push-type mechanisms, and U-shaped
mechanisms are acceptable designs. Hardware required for accessible door
passage shall be mounted no higher than 48" above the finished floor.
- If
a door has a door closer, then the sweep period of the closer shall be adjusted
so that from an open position of 70 degrees the door will take at least
3 seconds to move to a point 3" from the latch, measured to the leading
edge of the door.
- The
maximum door opening force, as measured directly above the lock, for pushing
or pulling open a door shall be as follows: Fire doors shall have the minimum
opening force allowable by the appropriate administrative authority. In
the ADA there is no requirement for exterior doors due to environmental
factors such as wind and pressure differences. In Oregon, Washington and
many other states (through their new building codes, which have now adopted
the ADA) the exterior doors must have a maximum opening force of 8-1/2 lbs..
When this is not feasible due to environmental conditions an automatic or
power-assisted door must be provided. Interior and sliding or folding doors
must have a maximum force of 5 lbs. These forces do not apply to the force
required to retract latch bolts or disengage other devices that may hold
the door in a closed position.
- Automatic
and power-assisted doors shall not open to backcheck faster than 3 seconds
and shall require no more than 15 lbs. of force to stop door movement.
- The
diameter or width of the gripping surface of a handrail or grab bar shall
be 1-1/4" to 1-1/2" or the shape shall provide an equivalent gripping surface.
If handrails or grab bars are mounted adjacent to a wall, the space between
the wall and the grab bar shall be 1-1/2".
|