Wheelchair accessible? Just ask Google Maps
Google Maps now has a feature that lists the wheelchair accessibility of a place, and relies on users to crowdsource the information.聽
Google Maps now has a feature that lists the wheelchair accessibility of a place, and relies on users to crowdsource the information.聽
Google is relying on crowdsourcing to make the world more wheelchair-friendly.
The search giant has launched a new feature through Google Maps that lists whether a location is wheelchair-accessible. Available only in the US to start, the feature relies on users to answer questions about the accessibility of a place they visit.
The new feature could impact millions of people in the United States. There are聽2.2 million people聽in the US who depend on a wheelchair, according to The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But the information could also assist users who rely on walkers, canes, or crutches, of which there are another 6.5 million people in the US, as well as mothers with strollers.
The US has become increasingly more accessible since President George H.W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) more than 25 years ago. But cyberspace hasn鈥檛 always kept up with this progress. The team at Google that worked on this feature hopes to change that.
鈥淎ccessibility at Google is a big deal,鈥 Rio Akasaka, the project manager for the accessibility feature, told Business Insider. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 often facilitated by whether or not there鈥檚 a legal requirement, or some sort of requirement we need to adhere to.鈥
In this case, Mr. Akasaka took it upon himself to start the project. Under a Google policy that allows an employee to spend 20 percent of their time working on a project unrelated to their main job, Akasaka and between five and 10 other Google employees dedicated themselves to introducing accessibility guidelines, according to Business Insider. Other projects that started under this rule include Google News, Gmail, and AdSense, according to Quartz.
鈥淟ocal Guides鈥 鈥 users who answer questions in exchange for early access to new Google features 鈥 reported the wheelchair accessibility of places they visited. After collecting data over this past year, Google recently launched the feature.
A place鈥檚 wheelchair-accessibility is displayed as an amenity in Google Maps. The map tool already displays information about a place鈥檚 address, operating hours, how busy it is, and user reviews. Because the feature relies on user-submitted data, not every place has its accessibility listed in the Google Maps app. But the list is growing. 聽
The ADA, signed into law in 1990, requires new buildings to have wheelchair access. But the requirements for structures built prior to the act鈥檚 signing are less strict, according to TechCrunch.
The new Google feature also marks progress for extending accessibility to cyberspace, something that hasn鈥檛 always been consistent in the past. A 2012 study indicates that most public library websites did not comply with accessibility standards required of government-funded institutions, as 海角大神 noted in 2014.
Among commercial websites, fewer than five percent of online shopping sites meet the needs of people with disabilities, Brian Landrigan, the head of sales and marketing for The Paciello Group, which specializes in software accessibility, told the Monitor. 聽
Public pressure has forced other technology companies to improve their accessibility. After Uber and Lyft faced allegations that they 聽discriminated against people with disabilities, Uber expanded the number of cities in which it offers services to people with all wheelchair types, from folding wheelchairs to motorized ones.
Whether it鈥檚 through complaints or the initiative of people like Akasaka, technological innovations have 鈥渢riggered a sea change鈥 for accessibility, as the Monitor reported in 2014:聽