[accessibleimage] bridge, exhibition, tactile maps

exhibition
*TUESDAY, JANUARY 27*
*Fitchburg State College <http://www.seeingwithphotography.com/swpc_home.html>.* /Shooting Blind: Photographs by the Visually Impaired./ Gallery Talk: 6:30pm. Opening Reception: 7pm. 978.345.2151. Campus Center Art Gallery, 160 Pearl St., Fitchburg MA 01420.

Eurobank implements “Design for All” principles
http://www.emportal.rs/en/news/serbia/76318.html

article excerpt

Ripley: Mesa students find inclusive sculptures along light rail
http://209.85.129.132/search?q=cache:E2IMxELnTywJ:www.eastvalleytribune.com/story/134366+Ripley:+Mesa+students+find+inclusive+sculptures+along+light+rail&hl=no&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=no
There’s an inscription under a bronze sculpture at a light rail station under “A” mountain in Tempe that I’m betting you can’t read.

Oh, if you took a good look at the sculpture you might recognize it as Roosevelt Dam, just as you undoubtedly would recognize the one next to it as the Tovrea Castle. (That’s the wedding-shaped building that looks out on East Valley commuters as they curve on the Loop 202 near Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport).

You might recognize the sculptures but you probably couldn’t read the inscriptions because they are in Braille and only in Braille.

I can’t read Braille either, but I know what the inscription says because several of my companions on a light rail outing this last week are blind or teach the visually impaired. In fact, there was quite a bit of chatter about the inscription as we left the rail and headed toward the park-and-ride lot next to the Sycamore Station in west Mesa.


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Model of new Stillwater lift bridge offers a vision in green

A three-dimensional model of the proposed Lift Bridge also will be on display.

The model is about 2 1/2 feet tall and was created by Feyereisen Studios of Minneapolis. It was designed using Braille and other features to also allow the visually impaired to experience the model.

"It's a very unique model and it's the first time we ever built a model for the blind," said Bob Feyereisen, whose company built the model with the help of two consultants from the blind community, Ken Rodgers and Jo Taliaferro.

The $10,000 model has lampposts held in place by magnets so that they can detach, instead of break off, when someone touches them. And the crosswalks, instead of just being painted, have a thickness so that a blind person can feel there's a crosswalk there, Feyereisen said.

http://www.startribune.com/local/east/37942474.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aULPQL7PQLanchO7DiUsr


Blog

Tactile Maps

http://ajfowler.wordpress.com/2009/01/20/tactile-maps/






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