ABSTRACT
Most people with low vision rely on their remaining functional vision for mobility. Our goal is to provide tools to help design architectural spaces in which safe and effective mobility is possible by those with low vision – spaces that we refer to as visually accessible. We describe an approach that starts with a 3D CAD model of a planned space and produces labeled images indicating whether or not structures that are potential mobility hazards are visible at a particular level of low vision. There are two main parts to the analysis. The first, previously described, represents low-vision status by filtering a calibrated luminance image generated from the CAD model and associated lighting and materials information to produce a new image with unseen detail removed. The second part, described in this paper, uses both these filtered images and information about the geometry of the space obtained from the CAD model and related lighting and surface material specifications to produce a quantitative estimate of the likelihood of particular hazards being visible. We provide examples of the workflow required, a discussion of the novelty and implications of the approach, and a short discussion of needed future work.
Acknowledgments
Lighthouse Central Florida provided site access to photograph the new stairwell and facilitated the assistance of Pete Hall, Associate AIA, WELL AP, the project architect who created the REVIT model. Greg Ward provided help with Radiance issues. Yichen Liu and Rachel Gage provided assistance with testing of human subjects.
Disclosure statement
The authors have no financial interests to declare.