2006 I-Codes & Federal Disability Law:
Through an Accessible Looking Glass
How
the ICC Codes and ADA Regulations Interact
with Each Other as well as ABA and the Fair Housing
Act
This publication examines not
only how the ICC codes and ADA regulations relate to
one another, but also how a variety of other federal
laws (the Architectural Barriers Act [ABA], the
Rehabilitation Act, the Fair Housing Act [FHA])
still apply to the design and construction of
buildings and facilities in the United States.
At its most basic level, this
book reminds users of the codes that the ADA is not
the be-all-and-end-all of federal regulations that
other more restrictive federal requirements may
apply to a building being designed today. This book
examines how the civil rights dictates of federal
disability law and the goals of our nation's
building codes continue to be harmonized to the
point where, sometime in the not too distant future,
a single national Accessibility Code may become a
reality. This book is
offered as a supplement to the I-Codes and the
federal laws and regulations with the assumption
that the reader has, or is able to acquire, a basic
understanding of how barrier-free design and
construction is regulated in the I-Codes and federal
statutes.
(Soft-cover, 178 pages) |