“…A wealth of research has been conducted, along the last decade, to study and design software and devices devoted to improve the quality of life of users with disability while moving across the urban environment, with the aim of shifting the smart mobility paradigm into a smart and accessible mobility [5,118]. Scholars provided variegate approaches to accessible wayfinding and navigation, focused on different aspects, ranging from specific citizens' needs (i.e., blind users, wheelchair users [3,16]), to different contexts of use (i.e., indoor or outdoor [20,27]), to specific technologies (for instance to identify user's position [28]), to different data sources exploited (such as open data provided by municipalities or crowdsourced and crowdsensed data [31,48]). In spite of that, the presented approaches do not seem mature enough to be deployed in large-scale scenarios and in a pervasive fashion.…”