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ADA door clearance requires 32 inches minimum, but a 32-inch door won't get you there. Learn why 36-inch doors became the standard and what every ADA dimension is actually solving.
In this episode, Emily spent an entire day in a wheelchair during college and came back with a completely different understanding of accessible design. She walks you through how people actually move through buildings, from doors to ramps to corridors, and explains the human problem behind every ADA requirement. You'll learn door clear width, the 5-pound opening force rule, why pull-side maneuvering clearance is larger, and how the Capitol Crawl changed everything.
Beyond doors, this episode covers ADA ramp slopes and the 1:20 threshold that triggers handrail requirements, the guardrail vs handrail distinction that contractors get wrong constantly, the 60-inch turning diameter (not radius), protruding objects and cane detection, and reach ranges for operable controls.
📝 Key topics covered:
ADA door clearance: 32-inch clear width and why 36-inch doors are standard
Door opening force: the 5-pound rule for interior doors
Guardrail vs handrail: 42 inches for falls, 34-38 inches for grip
ADA ramp slope: the 1:12 rule and the 1:20 ramp trigger
Protruding objects: the 27-80 inch cane detection danger zone
Reach ranges: 15-48 inches for operable controls
⏱️ Chapters:
(0:00) What Is ADA?
(1:57) Free Study Notes
(2:45) ADA Door Clear Width
(6:06) ADA Door Opening Force
(7:37) ADA Door Maneuvering Clearance
(10:27) ADA History: The Capitol Crawl
(11:59) ADA vs Building Code
(13:50) When ADA Applies
(15:11) ADA: Designing for Every Body
(19:11) ADA Accessible Route
(21:12) ADA Ramp Slope: The 1:12 Rule
(23:39) Guardrail vs Handrail
(26:42) ADA Turning Diameter
(29:21) ADA Protruding Objects
(32:09) ADA Reach Range Requirements
(34:20) ADA Elevator Requirements
(35:38) ADA Quick Reference
(38:16) ADA Bathroom Layout Preview
📖 Read the full blog post
📝 Download the FREE ADA Door Clearance study notes
🎯 Get access to all ARE study materials with the ARE 101 Membership
🎯 Join our 10-week ARE Boot Camp
📚 Individual ARE Exam Courses:
Building Codes 101
PA 101 (Programming and Analysis)
PPD 101 (Project Planning and Design)
PDD 101 (Construction Documents and Specs)
CE 101 (Construction and Evaluation)
PcM 101 (Practice Management)
PjM 101 (Project Management)
AIA Contracts 101
Mechanical Systems 101
By Michael Riscica5
2323 ratings
ADA door clearance requires 32 inches minimum, but a 32-inch door won't get you there. Learn why 36-inch doors became the standard and what every ADA dimension is actually solving.
In this episode, Emily spent an entire day in a wheelchair during college and came back with a completely different understanding of accessible design. She walks you through how people actually move through buildings, from doors to ramps to corridors, and explains the human problem behind every ADA requirement. You'll learn door clear width, the 5-pound opening force rule, why pull-side maneuvering clearance is larger, and how the Capitol Crawl changed everything.
Beyond doors, this episode covers ADA ramp slopes and the 1:20 threshold that triggers handrail requirements, the guardrail vs handrail distinction that contractors get wrong constantly, the 60-inch turning diameter (not radius), protruding objects and cane detection, and reach ranges for operable controls.
📝 Key topics covered:
ADA door clearance: 32-inch clear width and why 36-inch doors are standard
Door opening force: the 5-pound rule for interior doors
Guardrail vs handrail: 42 inches for falls, 34-38 inches for grip
ADA ramp slope: the 1:12 rule and the 1:20 ramp trigger
Protruding objects: the 27-80 inch cane detection danger zone
Reach ranges: 15-48 inches for operable controls
⏱️ Chapters:
(0:00) What Is ADA?
(1:57) Free Study Notes
(2:45) ADA Door Clear Width
(6:06) ADA Door Opening Force
(7:37) ADA Door Maneuvering Clearance
(10:27) ADA History: The Capitol Crawl
(11:59) ADA vs Building Code
(13:50) When ADA Applies
(15:11) ADA: Designing for Every Body
(19:11) ADA Accessible Route
(21:12) ADA Ramp Slope: The 1:12 Rule
(23:39) Guardrail vs Handrail
(26:42) ADA Turning Diameter
(29:21) ADA Protruding Objects
(32:09) ADA Reach Range Requirements
(34:20) ADA Elevator Requirements
(35:38) ADA Quick Reference
(38:16) ADA Bathroom Layout Preview
📖 Read the full blog post
📝 Download the FREE ADA Door Clearance study notes
🎯 Get access to all ARE study materials with the ARE 101 Membership
🎯 Join our 10-week ARE Boot Camp
📚 Individual ARE Exam Courses:
Building Codes 101
PA 101 (Programming and Analysis)
PPD 101 (Project Planning and Design)
PDD 101 (Construction Documents and Specs)
CE 101 (Construction and Evaluation)
PcM 101 (Practice Management)
PjM 101 (Project Management)
AIA Contracts 101
Mechanical Systems 101

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