Sports and games

Equal access
Requirements for the integration of equal access for all users
The Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) defines ‘premises’ as the whole of the built environment and includes existing buildings, new or proposed buildings, transport systems, car parks, pathways, and public parks and gardens.
Note: Consult an access consultant accredited by the Association of Consultants in Access Australia (ACAA).
Elements required for equal access
- Embellishments must be designed in accordance with AS 1428 Design for Access and Mobility.
- Ensure that sports and games are connected to a ‘continuous accessible path of travel’ to enable equal access for people who use wheelchairs. Ensure that the path of travel is connected to an accessible car park space.
- Ensure that equal access, shaded spectator seating is available and that a continuous accessible path of travel is available to the spectator seating.
- Consider equal access elements in design for all sport and games to allow participation by people of varying abilities.
- Provide equal access to sports and games at the recommended mounting and circulation heights to provide wheelchair access and reach heights (where possible).
- Ensure at least one end of a table tennis table and board games table, is accessible for wheelchairs.
- Avoid finished height difference between a concrete slab and adjoining surfaces to prevent trip hazards and to prevent ‘tramlining’ of pram, bicycle and wheelchair wheels.
- Children’s bike educational tracks are to be a minimum of 2.0 m wide with an at grade area for at least 200 mm each side.
See LIM Paths, trails and tracks for further guidance.
Visual/sensory wayfinding
- For people with a vision impairment, provide a minimum 30% luminance contrast between objects and the background they are viewed against, for ease of identification.
- Where luminance contrast may not be achieved (such as grey aluminium furniture on grey concrete), luminance contrast can be addressed by introducing colour into the ground surface providing a minimum 30% luminance contrast with the embellishment base, resulting in the embellishment being more visible for people who have low vision.
- Consider designing nodes with a contrasting coloured concrete, or a variation in surface texture, to enable people with a disability to identify the location of embellishments along a pathway.
This component is currently in development