BroganMc
It's not the age, it's the mileage
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2005
- Messages
- 2,991
The medical center director where I work is a triple amputee and his remaining hand is missing fingers and flexibility. (He is, however, a speed demon in his powered chair.) Do you think they thought the swinging door would be easier for a person with this type of disability than the sliding door? I know some of those sliders don't always slide so easily.
I've been surprised before by what others can do and how. However, my functionality is not so far off from that. I can stand and walk a bit but my hands are more like flippers thanks to joint contractures. (I use my wrists to push or grab anything bigger than a pencil.)
The issue in shutting a swinging door in a chair is a clearance one. You need long arms to grab the door and pull it closed as you back up the chair. Or outside you need to manuever your chair out of the swing span, preferably by being behind the door as you push it closed. (I've been hit in the head many times trying to pull a bathroom door open from inside.)
A sliding door can be closed at a parallel angle. Just drive up to the side, lean and push open or closed. I open my deck doors like that all the time. The hardest part is grasping the door handle to get it started a crack. (Once the door is open a crack my footplate can slide it open the rest.)
Probably the biggest misunderstanding for planners is the added bulk a wheelchair adds to a person. You can't just squeeze by a partially open door. That's one of the reasons the pocket doors on accessible bathrooms (as in AKV's design) works so well.