Sasaki welcomed leaders in disability rights and design to discuss human-centered design in the built environment
Inclusive Design
Inclusion is fundamental to our design process. Sasaki aims to design inclusive places that welcome all users and create equitable experiences, whether through providing routes for users with different modes of mobility, offering diverse amenities that support a range of user needs, or by creating flexible spaces that users from different cultures and backgrounds can adapt to feel like their own.
To celebrate National Disability Independence Day, landscape architect Ian Scherling reflects on the importance of creating a human-centered design practice and issues a challenge to designers
Sasaki talked with Boston’s Disability Commissioner Kristen McCosh about the universal accessibility of the new plaza design
Introducing the first planning effort at UC Berkeley to comprehensively address accessibility across the campus landscape
Too often in the design world the term “accessible design” is an epithet for meeting the minimum requirements put forth by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Learn how Sasaki designers are reinventing inclusive best practices that aim to create spaces suited for all users
Principal Greg Havens, AIA, AICP pens a perspective for SCUP Journal's Summer 2020 issue, advocating schools seize the opportunity to plan with universal design principles as pedagogy and campus are reconceived to respond to the pandemic