Urban sidewalks: visualization and routing for individuals with limited mobility
Nicholas Bolten, Amirhossein Amini, Yun Hao, Vaishnavi Ravichandran,, Andre Stephens, Anat Caspi

TL;DR
This paper presents AccessMap, a system that integrates diverse open data sources to visualize and route urban paths suitable for individuals with limited mobility, improving route planning and accessibility awareness.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel approach to synthesize open data into an accessible routing graph tailored for people with limited mobility in urban environments.
Findings
Integrated open data improves route planning accuracy.
Accessible routing graph enables personalized, variable-cost navigation.
Enhanced urban mobility for people with disabilities.
Abstract
People with limited mobility in the U.S. (defined as having difficulty or inability to walk a quarter of a mile without help and without the use of special equipment) face a growing informational gap: while pedestrian routing algorithms are getting faster and more informative, planning a route with a wheeled device in urban centers is very difficult due to lack of integrated pertinent information regarding accessibility along the route. Moreover, reducing access to street-spaces translates to reduced access to other public information and services that are increasingly made available to the public along urban streets. To adequately plan a commute, a traveler with limited or wheeled mobility must know whether her path may be blocked by construction, whether the sidewalk would be too steep or rendered unusable due to poor conditions, whether the street can be crossed or a highway is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Transport and Accessibility
