Title III- Affecting Places of Public Accommodation
Design and Construction Requirements of the Americans with
Disabilities Act
What buildings and facilities are covered by the design
requirements of Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA)?
The design requirements of Title III of the ADA affect "places of
public accommodation" and "commercial facilities." (See accompanying
Fact Sheet describing places of public accommodation and commercial
facilities.)
What are the design requirements for new construction?
New construction is defined as the design or construction of a
facility for first occupancy.
All construction of places of public accommodation and commercial
facilities for first occupancy after January 26, 1993 must be
accessible to and usable by individuals with disabilities.
First occupancy is determined if
- the last application for a building permit or permit extension
for the facility is certified to be complete or received by a
State or County government after January 26, 1992 and
- if the first certificate of occupancy for the facility is
issued after January 26, 1993.
A facility may be exempted from this requirement if it can
demonstrate that it is structurally impracticable to comply.
What are the design requirements for alterations?
An alteration is a change to a place of public accommodation or a
commercial facility that affects or could affect the usability of
the building or facility of any part thereof.
Examples include additions, remodeling, renovation,
rehabilitation, reconstruction, historic restoration, changes or
rearrangement in structural parts or elements, and changes or
rearrangement in the plan configuration of walls and full
partitions. It does not include normal maintenance, reroofing,
painting or wallpapering, asbestos removal, or changes to mechanical
or electrical systems unless they affect the usability of the
building or facility.
Any alteration to a place of public accommodation or a commercial
facility, after January 26, 1992, must be made so as to ensure that,
to the maximum extent feasible, the altered portions of the facility
are readily accessible to and usable by individuals with
disabilities. An alteration is deemed to be undertaken after January
26, 1992 if the physical alteration begins after that date.
If the alteration affects or could affect the usability of or
access to an area of a facility that contains a primary function,
the path of travel to the altered areas and the restrooms,
telephones and drinking fountains serving the altered area should,
to the maximum extent feasible, be readily accessible to and usable
by individuals with disabilities. In no case, however, will an
entity be required to spend more than twenty (20) percent of the
total cost of altering the primary function area to provide such an
accessible path. If it would cost more than twenty percent of the
total cost to do so then only an amount equal to twenty percent of
the intended alteration has to be spent.
Is there an elevator exemption?
Yes. The installation of an elevator is not required for either
new construction or alterations in facilities that are less than
three stories or have less than 3,000 square feet per floor, unless
it houses a shopping center, a shopping mall, a professional office
of a health care provider, a terminal, depot or other station used
for specified public transportation, or an airport passenger
terminal.
What are the requirements for historic structures?
A qualified historic building or facility is one that is either
listed, or eligible for listing, in the national Register of
Historic Places, or one that is designated as historic under state
or local law.
If making the altered portion of a "qualified historic building"
readily accessible would threaten or destroy the historic
significance of that building or facility certain alternative
minimum accessibility standards may instead be applied. In some
instances, it will still not be possible to achieve compliance with
the alternative accessibility requirements without’ destroying the
historic significance of the building. Specific procedures and
consultation with the appropriate "preservation officer(s)" at the
State or Federal level are necessary to determine the exemptions.
Are there specific design guidelines?
The ADA final design guidelines, published by the U.S.
Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board in the
Federal Register on July 26, 1991, are the guidelines to which all
new construction and alterations must be met. These design
guidelines are DIFFERENT from the Uniform Federal Accessibility
Standards and the local building codes. The guidelines give specific
design and scoping requirements and also provide guidance on how to
apply the design guidelines.
Does this law replace existing local building codes?
The ADA accessibility requirements do not supplant or replace
State or local laws that impose higher accessibility standards. The
governing principal to follow when Federal, State, or local codes
differ is that the more stringent requirements apply.
Who enforces the Americans with Disabilities Act?
The U.S. Attorney General, upon the filing of a complaint by an
individual. Individuals may also file private law suits with the
courts having jurisdiction.