
« Looking at space from the framework of disability doesn't just lead to results on accessibility, but allows the questioning of unsaid spatial norms …»

« Disabled people are discreet, often invisible, especially when considering that 20+% of the adult population is disabled. Part of this invisibility could be caused by different, discrete spatialities : instead of going around explorable spaces, disabled individuals can be restricted to a collection of point-places…”

« One can always find a path to one's destination due to the numerous redundancies of one’s path in an urban zone. Percolation theory helps describe the peculiar probability of a disabled experience in the same networks. Criticality effects then mean that small quantitative differences can have huge qualitative impact. Multiply the number of trashcans on sidewalks by two, and wheelchair users (just an example) cannot circulate anymore...”

« Maps of disabled mobilities reveal borders and discontinuity that rarely appears in our comprehension of space and time in mobilities studies.”



